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The Exact Blush Margot Robbie Used to Get Her Golden Globes Glow


How far in advance do you plan the look?

The second I see the dress I start obsessing. Sometimes I’ll see it on the day of, which is not ideal, and sometimes it can be weeks ahead of time. The second I know what that dress is, I’m thinking about her and what will work, and zooming in on it. I’ll go down in my studio swatching products and even trying things on myself. Usually I’m down there until 1 A.M. I want her to feel like the best version of herself so it’s my responsibility to do whatever I can to help her achieve that, and I take it very seriously.

Do you tend to make last-minute decisions and changes?

I try not to do too many things last-minute because that takes time and it would be messy. Ideally, when she sits down for makeup it’s worked out and laid out and ready to go.

But with the eyeliner, for instance, I was going back and forth about what color to use at the lash line—in the bodice, you could kind of pull out any color—but I kept veering toward purple in my head because I love purple with a green eye. Then, when I saw her manicure for the night, it was a little bit fuchsia and it told me I was going in the right direction, it tied in beautifully.

You manage to keep the makeup classic and beautiful but with clever, modern twists. What’s the secret?

It’s whether the girls can carry off a little ‘something something.’ It’s not always appropriate, but when it is, it’s really about the wear–that they feel confident to carry it off. If she didn’t feel confident about the color, no matter how subtle I make it, then I’m not going to do it. It’s also about the event. For instance, what I would do for the Met Gala, wouldn’t be what I would do for the Golden Globes. The Globes are generally an event that can have an element of fun to them, but it’s an acting event, it’s not a fashion event, whereas the Met Gala, which is about fashion, would be a whole other vibe.

What are your favorite products to use on Margot?

I never use any mascara other than the Chanel Le Volume mascara–and not just on Margot, on everyone–because I need a mascara that’s going to go on the lash but that’s not going to flake. I can’t be worrying about the mascara flaking when I send them out to an awards and that mascara is very reliable.

Then I love the Chanel Waterproof Brow Pencil, the light blond is the perfect color for Margot, it’s the perfect texture and it serves me well.

My other major go-to product is the Stylo Ombre Et Contour in 12 Contour Clair. That product I pretty much use on everyone when I do makeup, like everyone, because it’s the perfect taupey color that can give structure to your eyes without looking heavy or makeup-y. I can give a little bit of contour to the crease of the eye or under the eye, or wherever the eye needs a bit of pushback. Those are my biggies. After that it’s like, let’s play.

This story originally appeared on Glamour UK.



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Brad Pitt and Margot Robbie Shaded Leonardo DiCaprio About That Titanic Door Scene


Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, and Margot Robbie are currently making the rounds promoting their upcoming Quentin Tarantino film, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. But during a recent interview with MTV, the three stars weighed in on a controversial moment from DiCaprio’s past: that famous Titanic door scene.

In the almost 22 years since the film’s 1997 debut, the topic of whether or not Jack could have fit on the floating door that allowed Kate Winslet‘s Rose’s heart to go on has been hotly debated. Of course, he does not, dies, and sinks down into the ocean as Rose floats to safety. Back in 2017, Winslet told Stephen Colbert that Jack “should have tried harder to get on that door,” and it appears that Robbie agrees with this sentiment.

“Oh my God, I thought it,” she replies when interviewer Josh Horowitz, throws out the question, “Could Jack have fit on that door at the end of Titanic?” She goes on to say that she remembers “bawling her eyes out as a girl.” DiCaprio insists (with a smile) throughout the exchange that he has “no comment.” Horowitz says, “That’s telling, I think.”

“That is funny,” Pitt says. “I’m going to have to go back and look now, shoot. Certainly.” He goes on to rib DiCaprio, “Could you? Could you? Could you have squeezed in there? You could’ve, couldn’t you?” DiCaprio holds strong with another, “No comment” even as Robbie asks whether he inquired about the logistics at the time.

Watch the exchange for yourself below.

The social media replies show that time hasn’t slowed down the need for answers to this all-important question. In fact, this one interview will probably ignite the debate all over again. “It wasn’t space that was the issue, it was buoyancy. Myth Busters proved it,” one user wrote. “He could have fit on the door, There was room for two of that door,” another insisted.

The mystery lives on, I guess.



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Margot Robbie and Saoirse Ronan Are Totally Unrecognizable in the First 'Mary, Queen of Scots' Posters


Margot Robbie and Saoirse Ronan are never ones to hold back when it comes to roles (Harley Quinn, anyone?), and it’s clear Mary, Queen of Scots will be no different. The two have really come out to play—actually, come out to fight, if we’re being loyal to historical accuracy—in the first posters for the upcoming period drama.

Saoirse plays the reigning Scottish queen, with Margot tackling Queen Elizabeth I, Mary’s cousin and Queen of England and Ireland. Their family dynamics are very twisted, to say the least, but we’ll spare you from a complete breakdown of British royal history. What you need to know is this: The film will focus on Mary, Queen of Scots’s attempt to overthrow and execute her cousin to take her throne. Elizabeth finds out about this attempt and condemns Mary to imprisonment and an eventual execution. What ensues are never-ending power grabs, mind games, and some of the finest wigs we’ve seen in recent memory.

See the posters for yourself, below.

PHOTO: Courtesy Focus Features

The first images from the film are also impressive:

MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS

PHOTO: John Mathieson / Focus Features

Saoirse Ronan as Mary Stuart

MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS

PHOTO: Parisa Tag / Focus Features

Margot Robbie as Queen Elizabeth I

MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS

PHOTO: Liam Daniel / Focus Features

Saoirse Ronan as Mary Stuart

Margot has found a particular creative fulfillment in playing the monarch, noting that the young women—who were in their early 20s when the drama began to transpire—have a much more complex relationship than people realize. “Everyone manipulated their relationship,” she told EW. “It’s complicated, it’s tragic, and it’s bizarre. The only other person in the world who could understand the position they were in was each other.”

The first Mary, Queen of Scots trailer will debut Thursday, and the film will debut in December.



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Margot Robbie's Tonya Harding Will Make You Rethink Everything You Thought You Knew


The imagery is iconic: Nancy Kerrigan’s virginal white lace dress versus Tonya Harding’s vampy maroon get-up. So are the sounds: Kerrigan’s wails of “Why?” as she clutches her knee, versus Tonya’s sobs to the Olympic judges while clutching her broken lace skate. The year was 1994, and these two were vying to be America’s figure skating sweetheart. One was an assailant, the other a victim. The stage was set, the character tropes determined.

Twenty-three years ago, popular imagination had room enough for only one kind of ice queen: the good girl, the one with the lithe body and shiny hair, who followed the rules. Tonya Harding—with her homespun costumes, moussed-up bangs, and routines set to bass-heavy soundtracks—cut a starkly different figure. After the legendary dust-up at the 1994 Lillehammer Olympics, Nancy went on to host Saturday Night Live and wave (grudgingly) from the Disney Parade. Tonya receded from the spotlight as little more than a punchline.

PHOTO: Mike Powell

Director Craig Gillespie’s new film I, Tonya resurrects Harding, but in 2017 she’s given the homecoming she never could have received in 1994. Instead, the movie celebrates Harding, played viciously by Margot Robbie in all her white-trash glory: her heavy metal skate routines, her foul mouth, her rural poverty. She decries a system rigged against her. After receiving low scores at one competition, despite out-skating her more demure challengers, she glides up to the judge’s box and asks, “How do I get a fair shot?” “We also judge on presentation,” the evaluator retorts, gazing down his nose at the 5’1” scrapper before him.

It’s a moment that’s unequivocally sympathetic to Harding—who we’ve just seen slaving with needle and thread over the outfit the judges are scorning—but it wouldn’t always have had that effect. Her image is cast in the light of today’s progressive feminism. In a flat Oregon accent with frizzy blonde hair, Robbie as Tonya tells the camera: “Most people’s reaction to me is that I’m a real person, in a sport where the judges want you to be an old-timey version of what a woman is supposed to be.”

The sympathetic portrayal of Tonya Harding shows us how far feminism has come in just over two decades. What makes this Tonya different is that we get the whole of her—especially parts that were edited out in the 1994 media coverage. For the first time, we get a clear picture of her lifelong victimization: first at the hands of her maniacal stage mother, played by Allison Janney—whose hilariously diabolical portrayal is worth the price of admission—and later at the fists of her abusive husband Jeff Gillooly. Margot Robbie serves an Oscar-worthy performance, reveling in Harding’s contradictions: her raw talent and self-sabotage, the unfair aspersions cast upon her, and her unwillingness to admit responsibility.

She was ahead of her time; today, pop culture has anointed realness and authenticity as queen. Squeaky-clean Taylor Swift is on the wane, while the regular degular schmegular girl from the Bronx, Cardi B, reigns supreme. Lifestyle doyennes like Gwyneth Paltrow and her pristine white jeans (genes?) seem retro compared to down-to-earth and self-deprecating Chrissy Teigen. The Kardashians handily shoved the Hiltons off their pedestal, swapping the pedigree of a hotel empire for the fame of a sex tape. The bulk of Keeping Up With the Kardashians depicts them standing around kitchen islands and lounging under blankets. Somehow, our heroines shape-shifted from the unattainable perfection to aspirational normality.

PHOTO: NEON

We are now far more sensitive to the influence of powerful men over women. When women come forward, as they have been in droves across all industries decrying sexual harassment, or as victims of sexual violence, the culture is much more willing to hear out these accusers. We are even more willing to consider the person’s context. We now have a word for people who question a woman’s background and use it against her: slut shaming. But in the ’90s it was considered perfectly acceptable.

In 1991, the same year Harding skated her history-making triple axel, Anita Hill was delivering testimony to Congress about how Clarence Thomas routinely sexually harassed her at work from 1981 to1983. Instead of hearing out the routine abuse and humiliation she endured, she had her character and personal life assassinated, with Missouri Senator John Danforth suggesting she might suffer from “erotomania,” the delusion that a powerful superior is in love with her. Many asked why she waited nine years to bring these allegations to light, a classic move to undermine women as played out in the case of Cosby’s victims. Conservative pundit David Brock painted her, in his words, as “a little bit nutty and a little bit slutty.”

This knee-jerk designation stuck throughout the ‘90s. Monica Lewinsky, a 22-year-old intern, was excoriated not only by conservatives licking their chops to send Bill Clinton down, but by feminists on the left as well. Gloria Steinem wrote a defense of Clinton in a 1998 NYT op-ed, arguing: “The power imbalance between them increased the index of suspicion, but there is no evidence to suggest that Ms. Lewinsky’s will was violated, quite the contrary.” In the wake of the Shitty Media Men list and more nuanced understandings of the dynamics of power, coercion, and consent, this sentence reads like it hails from the Stone Age. In 1999, New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd characterized Lewinsky as a “sexual climber” who “…connived to trade beauty and sex for affluence and status.” That a self-described feminist lobbed this assertion makes the 2017 head explode. Katie Roiphe recognized the irony in 1998, saying, “What’s interesting is that women overwhelmingly, even more than men…still strongly support Clinton. Even mainstream feminists, who you’d think would come out and say, ‘You know, here’s this poor young woman being exploited, let’s take her side,’ they’re not taking her side.”

Though Harding’s black mark was for violence and class animosity rather than sexual victimization, the ‘90s media still relished in the schadenfreude of her fall from whatever grace she momentarily held. But I, Tonya is fully steeped in today’s ethos. The film excavates facts of Harding’s biography that, if not unknown, were underreported at the time. Her mother abused her throughout her childhood, even beating her with a hairbrush before a competition. “She skates better when she’s mad,” she declares. Later, she even pays off a heckler to lob insults like, “Where’d you park your double wide?” as Harding toddles out onto the ice. Harding dropped out of high school at 15 years old to pursue skating—the same age she had her leering stepbrother, who she called “Creepy Chris,” arrested for attempting to molest her. This happened to be the same day she met Jeff Gillooly, the man who would ultimately destroy her career. Following the pattern of abuse she grew up with, Gillooly, too, beat her horribly. In a moment of black-as-night comedy, Robbie deadpans: “Nancy gets hit one time and the world shits. I got hit all the time!”

In one poignant and revealing scene, Gillooly gets pulled over for speeding. The reason for his haste is that he’s ferrying his bride to the hospital, after he shot her in the eye. The cop sees her in distress, yet does nothing. “And that’s why I don’t trust the authorities,” she tells us. One can see why.

Even the knee-capping scheme in light of today’s news doesn’t seem all that crazy. If in 1994 an emissary from the future could have swooped down and told us that in 2016 the Russians would hack our election and a quasi-illiterate, hate-mongering reality star would be president, a casual kneecapping sabotage doesn’t seem that far out.

Harding claims to have no knowledge of the planned attack, which was carried out by her bodyguard Sean Eckhardt and her then-husband Gillooly. Today, had the reality of the domestic violence she endured been public record, a far more sympathetic embrace of Harding would be expected. Instead, Harding became a laughingstock and was robbed of her passion. When the judge barred Harding from figure skating after she plead guilty to hindering the prosecution, she told him she’d rather do jail time. Skating was all she’d ever known—and loved. She was denied. So she used her body as her profit again, becoming a professional boxer. She now works as a landscaper and is “a good mom” (her words) to a 12-year-old son. This week, she even joined Margot Robbie on the red carpet for I, Tonya‘s premiere. She’s living the American dream—after we snatched it from her.

NEON and 30WEST Present the Los Angeles Premiere of "I, Tonya" Supported By Svedka

PHOTO: Vivien Killilea



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Margot Robbie Feels Your Work-Life Balance Pain


Margot Robbie knows that the Sunday Scaries are real. She’s right alongside us as we prepare to face the week ahead and wonder where on earth the long weekend went, and she knows how it feels to burn out and feel the huge hole of self-doubt and panic open up. Like you, she is a busy woman, what with acting (especially now that her Harley Quinn character in Suicide Squad is getting a spinoff because she was the best thing about the movie), and all the press that goes with acting, and with her side hustle that is very much A Whole Thing Entirely (that is, production company LuckyChap, which she co-runs). Then there’s also the matter of having a life—making time to breathe and go on vacation and hang out with friends.

And, OK, maybe we don’t have the same red-carpet appearances that she does, or the days on set shooting away from family and friends, or having to back to produce films at the end of all of it. But our problems are our own! And work-life balance is something that a lot of us struggle with. Robbie, however, can relate:

She opened up in an interview with Vogue Australia recently about just how hard managing all of it can be, and it was refreshingly realistic. “Having a business is stressful and time-consuming, but it’s incredibly rewarding,” she told the magazine. “There are obviously a lot of times where I’ll have a meltdown and go: ‘I can’t do it anymore.’ And you miss out on a lot of things, like you rarely go on holidays, you miss everyone’s weddings, everyone’s birthdays. I haven’t been home once this year, I haven’t seen my best friends, my nephew.”

See? It’s even hard for silver screen goddesses like her! Which is why it’s important to take time for self-care, in whatever form that takes for you. If you’re feeling as stressed as Robbie is—or hey, just stressed!—pull some of our tips. Or just heed fellow Aussie and actress Cate Blanchett‘s wise words:

“I quickly realized if you’re incapable of looking after yourself, you’re incapable of looking after other people. It’s about trying to find as much as you can of a balance.”

The balance will never be perfect, perhaps, but post-yoga Nutella and Netflix, in my opinion, totally help make it all work.

Related Stories:
Harley Quinn and The Joker Are Getting Their Own ‘Suicide Squad’ Spin-off
Margot Robbie on Playing a ‘Complicated’ Mother Who Puts Herself First



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Margot Robbie Is Tonya Harding's Twin in the First Trailer for 'I, Tonya'


The saga of Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan is one of the most infamous in sports history. They were ice-skating rivals, and in 1994 Harding’s ex-boyfriend tried to edge Kerrigan out by hiring a man to break her right leg. Harding’s involvement in this attack led to an absolute media frenzy; news trucks camped outside her house, and journalists were assigned to track her every move. The scandal followed both Harding and Kerrigan for years—and, in many ways, it still haunts them. You can’t say one of their names without mentioning the other.

And now this period in Harding’s life is becoming a film. I, Tonya is slated to hit theaters this winter, and it stars Margot Robbie in the titular role and Caitlin Carver as Kerrigan. It’s a black comedy, and it’s unclear how the film will address the Kerrigan-Harding scandal. One thing’s for sure, though: Robbie is a dead-ringer for Harding in the movie.

The bangs! The voice! The messy ponytail! It’s seriously incredible how much Robbie transformed herself for this role. She’s a shoe-in for an Oscar nomination this year—not to mention every critics’ choice award and, like, probably a Pulitzer. Basically just give Robbie all the prizes for this performance.

Check out the one-minute trailer for yourself, below:

[embedded content]

“I wanted to meet her to kind of say that I’m going to create a character. Wherever this film takes us, this is not me trying to replicate you,” Robbie told Deadline about Harding. “It was interesting to hear her perspective on things that we thought we knew. It’s always going to sound different from the person who it happened to.”

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Margot Robbie on Playing a Mother Who Puts Herself First in Goodbye Christopher Robin

Margot Robbie Found the Most Perfect Eyeliner Choice for Light Eyes

Margot Robbie Reportedly Tattooed Her Wedding Guests



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