Anne Hathaway is π eπ₯ier than ever
It has been ten years since Anne Hathaway won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her performance inΒ Les Miserablesβ¦which also marks the ten year anniversary of Hathahate. People were annoyed at her β because she wanted it too much, because she tried too hard, because she was too earnest, too ambitious. This was two years after she and James Franco co-hosted the Oscars and Iβll always credit Duana for defending her here at LaineyGossip after that debacle,Β posting at the timeΒ that Anne was not the f-cking problem, HE was the f-cking problem.
Duana has always been able to see the truth of who Annie is: a theatre kid, and theatre kids will never give up on a show. When the show is going badly, itβs the theatre kids who will stick it out to the end, itβs the theatre kids who sing their hearts out until they drown.
Hathahate, however, took a toll on Anne Hathaway β as it would on anyone. But a decade later, as the culture continues to interrogate itself, and course-correct from its mistakes, we find Annie in her 40s, and better than ever.
She is currently promotingΒ Eileen, an independent film due out December 1 that SarahΒ reviewedΒ last January after its premiere at Sundance. As she wrote in her piece, βten out of ten, no notesβ, describing the film as βhorny and derangedβ.Β EileenΒ came out of Sundance with acclaim, which is why there are some people out there wondering why itβs not a bigger part of the award season conversation. To go back to Sarah though, this is a really competitive year, and there are so many bigger, higher profile movies that are taking up all the space. But while Annie is out here hyping it, because itβs her job, Iβm not sure that she cares as much, or at least in the same way, that she did back in 2013.
Thatβs what happens when youβve been through it, when you enter your no f-cks era, and most importantlyβ¦ when you start having a GREAT time. This is where Annie seems to be now. Which is not to say that sheβs not trying anymore, because sheβll always try, sheβs a theatre kid after all. But as she says in theΒ new issue of Porter this month:
βI feel like I lived in a space for a really long time where I was so afraid of doing it wrong and so tightly connected to the idea of doing it right. It makes not a damn bit of difference if you do it right or wrong. The point is, are you having a good time? Do you feel like yourself? And is it working with you?βΒ Β
Once you figure that out, you can keep the trying part the same in terms of the effort you put in, but now it just becomes more fun. Annie is having FUN.
And you know what one of the first signs of that was? Her style. And this is highlighted in the Porter profile as a big part of the Hathaissance that kicked off last year. It was about 18 months ago when Anne Hathaway showed up in Cannes with what seemed to be a new fashion personality. SheΒ slayed those carpets, she went viral for her looks, and the momentum just kept building from there. Valentino, Bulgari, Versace, Shiseidoβ¦
She just hosted the CFDAs last week and killed itΒ in an all-denim look. So, once again, we are seeing how fashion and clothing, expression through wardrobe, can be a professional asset, a vital part of career management. In other words, a significant part of the work and how celebrities identify themselves through their work.
This is personal for Annie. Sheβs in a new decade of her life now β a more confident one, more self-assured, and thatβs reflected in the way sheβs presenting herself publicly through her looks.
Which, not coincidentally, complements the roles sheβs been taking onscreen. InΒ EileenΒ sheβs plays a femme fatale and as Sarah notes in her review, she understands the assignment. Anne Hathaway of 2023 has moved beyond Andy Sachs. Sheβs now the mysterious older woman who influences the younger woman; sheβs the one taking advantage of the impressionable ingenue.
And at some point next year, sheβll be the older woman who falls in love with a much younger popstar in the film adaptation ofΒ The Idea of You, a horny book that, hopefully, has been made into a horny movie.
Which is exactly right for where we find Annie now, because she has never been π eπ₯ier, never been more desirable.
Here she is yesterday on junket duty in New York in a perfect fall outfit that Miranda Priestly would 100% cosign.