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Tag: tessa thompson

  • ‘His & Hers’ Exclusive: Crystal Fox Talks THAT Shocking Plot Twist, How She Found Out Whodunit, Connecting With Black Mamas & More

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    *SPOILERS AHEAD*

    Source: Netflix

    By now, you’ve probably recovered from Netflix‘s deliciously plot twisty-turny limited series His & Hers which continues to reign at the top of the popular steamer’s competitive TV charts.

    According to Variety, the smash hit series tightened its chokehold on the #1 spot with 29.5 million views after debuting with 19.9 million views.

    With a shocking string of twists and sharp left turns, His & Hers is the latest social media obsession to trend for weeks while stirring up all sorts of hilarious shenanigans across the internet.

    So, of course, we had to interview Crystal Fox who, in a truly wig-snatching moment, is revealed as the killer despite being the last (and we mean last) person you’d suspect.

    His & Hers asset
    Source: Netflix

    In what will be remembered as a perfectly executed twist, Fox admits she’s the one behind the murders of everyone who terrorized her daughter decades earlier, paving the way for Anna to get her dream ending. Whew!

    Check out our interview below:

    For those tardy to the messy party, the series centers around Anna (Tessa Thompson) who lives in a reclusive haze, fading away from her friends and career as a news anchor.

    But when she overhears about a murder in the sleepy town where she grew up, Anna is snapped back to life, pouncing on the case and searching for answers.

    His & Hers asset
    Source: Netflix

    Meanwhile, Detective Jack Harper (Jon Bernthal) is suspicious of her involvement, chasing her into the crosshairs of his own investigation in one of the murders.

    Check out the trailer below:

    Directed by co-showrunner William Oldroyd and Anja Marquardt, the six-episode limited series also stars Pablo Schreiber, Crystal Fox, Sunita Mani, Rebecca Rittenhouse, Marin Ireland, and Poppy Liu.

    “I was drawn to the murder mystery genre and deeply admire writer-director Will[iam] Oldroyd,” said Thompson.

    “The concept of setting a mystery in a small town like Dahlonega and exploring its intricate community
    relationships truly captivated me. While I’ve spent a lot of time in Atlanta, I hadn’t explored Dahlonega,
    the small town where our show takes place.

    Having grown up in big cities, I’ve always been fascinated by the interconnectedness of small-town life. Setting a mystery in such a location felt like the perfect opportunity to delve into the fascinating and sometimes complex relationships found in these American
    communities.”

    His & Hers is now streaming on Netflix!

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    Alex Ford

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  • Netflix & Chileeeee! Funniest (And Most Relatable) Tweets, Memes & Reactions To Deliciously Twisty-Turny Hit Series ‘His & Hers’

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    Netflix & Chileeeee!

    Source: Netflix

    Social media is STILL buzzing over Netflix’s deliciously plot twisty limited series His & Hers which trended #1 on the popular streamer while stirring up Sherlock Holmes-level sleuthery, mind-blowing theories, and endless debates across the internet and beyond.

    With a shocking string of twists and sharp left turns, the hit series continues to dominate social media discourse as Netflix’s latest buzzy series in a growing lineup of must-binge watches.

    Set between Atlanta and its well-to-do suburb of Dahlonega, Anna (Tessa Thompson) lives in a reclusive haze, fading away from her friends and career as a news anchor.

    But when she overhears about a murder in the sleepy town where she grew up, Anna is snapped back to life, pouncing on the case and searching for answers.

    His & Hers asset
    Source: Netflix

    Meanwhile, Detective Jack Harper (Jon Bernthal) is suspicious of her involvement, chasing her into the crosshairs of his own investigation in one of the murders.

    Check out the trailer below:

    Directed by co-showrunner William Oldroyd and Anja Marquardt, the six-episode limited series also stars Pablo Schreiber, Crystal Fox, Sunita Mani, Rebecca Rittenhouse, Marin Ireland, and Poppy Liu.

    “I was really drawn in by William Oldroyd,” said Thompson in an interview with TUDUM.

    “I’ve been such a big fan of his work. I think he’s really tremendous, and I love the idea of working with directors in new spaces for them. He had never worked in television. He wanted to make something sexy or pulpier than what he typically does, and something serialized.”

    Who did you suspect before the big reveal? Were you genuinely shocked by the finale? Where does this rank on Netflix’s impressive imited series lineup? Tell us down below and peep the funniest (and most relatable) reactions to His & Hers on the flip. (*SPOILERS AHEAD*)

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  • ‘His & Hers’ Exclusive:

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    Whew, chileeee

    Source: Netflix

    Mess has never been messier than it is in Netflix‘s deliciously plot twisty limited series His & Hers where the truth exists in a murky quagmire of lies and deception.

    Set between Atlanta and its well-to-do suburb of Dahlonega, Anna (Tessa Thompson) lives in a reclusive haze, fading away from her friends and career as a news anchor.

    His & Hers asset

    Source: Netflix

    But when she overhears about a murder in the sleepy town where she grew up, Anna is snapped back to life, pouncing on the case and searching for answers.

    Meanwhile, Detective Jack Harper (Jon Bernthal) is suspicious of her involvement, chasing her into the crosshairs of his own investigation in one of the

    Check out the trailer below:

    Directed by co-showrunner William Oldroyd and Anja Marquardt, the 6-episode limited series also stars Pablo Schreiber, Crystal Fox, Sunita Mani, Rebecca Rittenhouse, Marin Ireland, and Poppy Liu.

    His & Hers asset

    Source: Netflix

    “Sometimes writing is a bit like falling in love, and I was obsessed with this story,” said author Alice Feeney, whose popular novel inspired the series.

    “When I think about the journey this story has been on, from having the idea, to writing it in my shed, to seeing it published all over the world, and now seeing the characters come to life on screen, it feels nothing less than magic.”

    As expected, social media spiraled into hysteria over the twisty-turner series with one of the buzziest endings in recent memory.

    Ahead of the chaos, we caught up with Tessa Thompson who opened up about the hit series, studying news anchors, her love for Atlanta, and more in our interview below:

    His & Hers is now streaming on Netflix!

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  • Tessa Thompson and Nia DaCosta Introduce Hedda Gabler Like You’ve Never Seen Her Before

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    Every actor knows Hedda Gabler. The protagonist in Henrik Ibsen’s 1891 play is considered one of the great dramatic roles in theater. Elusive and complex, Hedda is a newlywed who, already bored with her marriage and the life she’s chosen, manipulates and terrorizes those around her—leading to deadly consequences.

    Maggie Smith, Isabelle Huppert, Annette Bening, Rosamund Pike, Mary-Louise Parker, and Cate Blanchett are just a few of the actors who have taken a stab at the role onstage. There have also been several screen adaptations of the play, including the BBC’s 1962 version, starring Ingrid Bergman; a 1981 movie with Diana Rigg; and a 1975 film, which earned Glenda Jackson an Oscar nomination for best actress.

    Tessa Thompson, Nina Hoss, and Imogen Poots in Hedda.

    Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios.

    But there has never been a version of the main character quite like filmmaker Nia DaCosta’s Hedda Gabler. Hedda, which will have its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 7, is a voluptuous cinematic reinvention of the text, with a towering performance by Tessa Thompson in its lead role. “Hedda is an inscrutable character,” says DaCosta. “And since the beginning, for the past hundred years, people have been like, ‘What the fuck is her deal?’”

    DaCosta’s adaptation digs deep into that question. Hedda is often characterized as just a bored, moody society wife, but DaCosta builds a character who has a lot more. In the film, Hedda is hosting a party at her new home with her husband, George (Tom Bateman), and over the span of a single night, she struggles with unfulfilled yearnings for a past lover while wreaking havoc on those who come into her orbit. “Hedda is someone who wants people’s animals to come out,” says DaCosta. “She just feels like everyone is cowardly, everyone’s lying. She has this deepening emptiness inside of her that makes her do things she doesn’t understand—and she is living in a world that she doesn’t get.”

    The film, which Amazon MGM Studios will release in select theaters on October 22 and globally on Prime Video on October 29, is set around 1954, but told through DaCosta’s modern sense and singular vision, showcasing Thompson’s agile work as a troublemaking woman for whom audiences can’t help but fall. “She’s mad and bad, but she’s still a person, and you kind of love her because she’s so ridiculous,” says DaCosta.

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    Hedda filmed in England at Flintham Hall, a stunning estate featuring a 40-foot high conservatory in stone and glass .

    Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios.

    DaCosta discovered Ibsen’s work while studying at London’s Royal Central School of Speech and Drama. “I thought that this character was terrifying, but also how brave to write a character like this, who is—to me, at least—unredeemable and does horrible things, but you’re telling it from her perspective and have huge empathy for her,” she says. She spent hours watching Hedda Gabler stage adaptations at theater libraries, but much of what she saw didn’t quite capture everything she thought the text could be. “I liked it, but I thought, This is not as funny or dark or sexy as what I read or what I felt when I was reading it,” she says. “So I was like, Wouldn’t it be cool to do a movie where I make all the subtext text?”

    When DaCosta wrote the first draft of the script a few years ago (around the time she was working on her 2021 Candyman sequel), she made one major change: Eilert Lövborg, a man competing with George for a teaching position and who was also once in love with Hedda, would be a woman. “My initial instinct was this character should be female because it helps themes about power and autonomy, about choice, about self-regulation,” says DaCosta. “I think Hedda is someone who imprisons herself a lot as well, as much as society does.”

    Eileen Lovborg (Nina Hoss) is openly in a relationship with another woman, Thea Clifton (Imogen Poots), when she arrives at Hedda’s home, on the verge of social redemption after a drinking problem. She is a threat to Hedda’s carefully crafted life in several ways: She is up for the position that Hedda’s husband hopes to get, which would provide financial stability, and she is Hedda’s former lover. The love triangle helps to show the contrast between the choices Hedda has made and those of Eileen. “You do have this extra layer of another thing that these women are fighting against to just feel like they’re people who matter in the eyes of the men that tell them what they should and shouldn’t be doing,” says DaCosta. “This made it more potent, more powerful, and also more unfortunately tragic.”

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    “Nia and I were really interested in this idea of what happens when we’re pretending to be something that we’re not, trying to fit into a world, a life, a marriage, a house, a place that doesn’t suit us,” says Thompson. “How that perverts our fundamental nature.”

    Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios.

    Thompson and DaCosta first met at the Sundance Directors Lab before working together on DaCosta’s 2018 feature directorial debut, Little Woods. The pair stayed in touch over the years, and DaCosta brought Hedda to her first. “She’s so brilliant at playing characters who have a roiling ocean inside of them but have to keep a façade,” says DaCosta. “She’s just really great at that tension.”

    Thompson was aware of the character of Hedda Gabler, as every actor is. “I had always just been really fascinated by the work of Ibsen, the questions that he asks, particularly about female personhood and how hemmed in or boxed in we can be by societal expectations,” she says, adding that she studied every adaptation of the play on which she was able to get her hands. “Obviously, he was writing so, so long ago, but how resonant some of those ideas continue to be.”

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    Tom Bateman with Thompson.

    Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios.

    The world of Hedda is built through lush production design, a provocative score by Oscar winner Hildur Guðnadóttir, and bold cinematography by Sean Bobbitt, who worked with DaCosta on The Marvels and is best known as Steve McQueen’s longtime collaborator. When it comes to the costumes, Hedda’s looks are inspired by the Dior silhouette of the time—and its impossibly small waist. Thompson liked the connection to the “idea of being hemmed in emotionally. You’re literally really hemmed in inside of those garments because of the construction and the boning. There is a kind of suffocation that I found really helpful in character.”

    As the tragedy unfolds into the late hours of the night, Hedda’s self-imprisonment and desire for acceptance become even more obvious, even as she leaves a trail of destruction in her wake. “The tragedy isn’t that like, ‘Oh no, she’s sad, her marriage sucks,’” says DaCosta. “The tragedy is that she herself will never know herself and she herself doesn’t understand why she does the things she does. And these people around her suffer because of it.”

    Hedda will premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival before being released in US theaters on October 22. This feature is part of Awards Insider’s exclusive fall film festival coverage, including first looks and exclusive interviews with some of the biggest names set to hit Venice, Telluride, and Toronto.

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    “I’ve always been interested in that space on the fringes,” says DaCosta (pictured with Thompson). “Not just literally in Little Woods, but also mentally where she exists inside of her head is such a foreign land even to herself.”

    Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios.

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    Rebecca Ford

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  • Tessa Thompson Swears By This Cult-Loved Foundation and $8 Face Mist

    Tessa Thompson Swears By This Cult-Loved Foundation and $8 Face Mist

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    What would you say your everyday makeup routine looks like?

    It’s pretty simple but has also become slightly more complicated because I’ve gotten into gadgets and tools and stuff. On a perfect day, I would have a minute to do some of that stuff like skin prep. It would be a toner, some moisturizer depending on what the weather’s like and what my skin needs. I have gotten really into primer, and Armani Beauty makes a lovely primer that I use now if I’m going to do makeup. Typically, an everyday thing for me is a no-makeup makeup [look]. [I like] just a little bit of foundation. Sometimes, I’ll even mix it with my moisturizer, serum, or a little bit of oil. I like to use corrector under my eyes, so a little bit of orange, then a little bit of concealer, and then not that much powder—maybe just in the middle of my face. Then I use some rose water, and off I go. For every day probably, I would wear Armani’s Lip Power Lipstick because it’s really moisturizing, and if I’m not doing a color color, I would do something closer to my natural lip color and work it out almost like a stain, and that would be a good five-minute makeup look.  

    Something that’s really good is using a liquid highlighter too! Sometimes, I will mix that with a little bit of foundation, a little bit of oil, and then it’ll give sort of a sheen. Remember when BB balm was so big? Kind of like that!

    Yes! It’ll give you a really natural, dewy glow. 

    Exactly. You mix a little bit of Armani’s Fluid Sheer Glow Enhancer ($33) with a little bit of foundation, a little bit of oil, and even a little bit of moisturizer. I just take a blush brush and just lightly brush that across my face. That’s an easy no-makeup makeup look and creates a healthy glow.

    I know you already mentioned a few, but what are your all-time favorite Armani Beauty products?

    I have so many! The Luminous Silk Foundation is why I’m really happy to get to represent this brand and this product because I’ve been using it for so long and, at the time—I know this sounds silly to say about makeup—it really was life changing when I discovered it because I had been working mostly in television and on some indie films. I was a young actor, and I would sit in chairs, and artists would have such a hard time shade-matching my skin. At the time, there weren’t a ton of brands that had a wide range of shades. And typically, they would put stuff on me, and I would look either orange, or I would look ashy. Then, I had my first big red carpet, and an artist used Luminous Silk on me, and he actually mixed two shades—one that was way too light for me and way too dark for me—and made his own special thing. Then he said, “You should look into this brand,” and I did. I remember going to a department store and finding something. It was the first time there was a shade that was right for me and came out of a bottle.

    Not just for me, but for friends and family, it’s been so easy for me to color-match for people in my life because there’s such a wide range of shades. Their foundation really did help me feel and look like myself when I was at work. As I mentioned, their primer’s really good. Another thing that I have discovered more recently in the last couple of years is the Fluid Sheer, which is so beautiful. You can use it, as I said, mixed with your foundation, and so many of their products are so user-friendly. I’ll be done with a full face of makeup and set it, then I can use Fluid Sheer and put it right on top, and it doesn’t do anything weird or funky to the makeup. It sits perfectly and just makes you look really dewy. I also love to use it on my shoulders or my clavicle if I have skin showing, and it just gives you this very healthy, dewy look. I find that with some highlighters, you can sort of see the glitter a little too much. My approach is usually to do pretty easy makeup, so I like it to be a little more invisible. This one can be, but it’s also buildable, so if you want it to be a bit more dramatic, you just use a little more when applying.

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    Shawna Hudson

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  • Tessa Thompson Says She’s “Never Had a Hamburger in My Life”

    Tessa Thompson Says She’s “Never Had a Hamburger in My Life”

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    Tessa Thompson might want to consider broadening her culinary horizons after admitting on the red carpet that she’s never had one fast food staple.

    While speaking to Amelia Dimoldenberg during an interview at the Vanity Fair Oscar party, the actor casually revealed, “I’ve never had a hamburger in my life.” When asked if that’s because she’s a vegetarian, she replied, “No. I eat other things, I’ve just never had a hamburger.” Thompson then added with a laugh, “It’s the only thing extraordinary that I can still claim.”

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     However, she then went on to claim something else pretty extraordinary, which is that she also only “recently” had an egg for the first time, but doesn’t get what all the hype is about. “I had never had one of those. I don’t think they’re great,” she confessed. When Dimoldenberg expressed that “eggs are so cool” because of all the different ways you can cook them, the Creed III star replied, “That’s the problem with them. It’s like, pick a lane.” But when asked about another famously versatile food—potatoes—she admitted, “I love potatoes.”

    This revelation comes shortly after Thompson made a very different sort of confession during an interview with Refinery29 earlier this month. She explained that she and Michael B. Jordan went to couple’s therapy together in character in preparation for their roles in the third installment of the Creed franchise in which she plays Jordan’s character’s wife, Bianca. “The line sometimes between character and us get blurred because we bring so much of what we’re exploring personally to the characters in general,” she explained of the experience. “I’ll say it was an early experience in couples therapy for us both [personally], but it was as these characters, which is very weird. But I think it reminded us of our own personal lives that going to therapy, even when a relationship is good, can be a good thing if you’re trying to just sharpen communication and figure out how someone works. It’s useful in so many relationships.” She added that while they were playing a character in those sessions, they were “also reflecting on our own relationships. Since we’ve been making these movies for eight, nine years, we’ve seen each other through various stages in our own romantic things.” She concluded, “We know stuff about each other’s lives. We shared and talked about it. So therapy ended up starting at work and getting more personal.”

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    Emily Kirkpatrick

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  • Your Favorite Celebs Read Boring Books

    Your Favorite Celebs Read Boring Books

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    Your favorite celebrity has it all: beauty, talent … and brains? In most cases, just like in real life, two out of three will have to do. But some celebs just need you to know there’s something going on up there in those pretty little heads. Performative intellectuality — we all do it. Celebrities just do it more obnoxiously.


    It’s DiCaprio’s commitment to climate change. It’s Jaden Smith’s fervor for conversations about the political and economic state of the world. It’s Emma Watson’s stint at Brown. And it’s every time your favorite star posts an Instagram story featuring an open book.

    A person’s “favorite” book can reveal far more about them than they ever will. And as we stare at our screens — hoarding all the info that Deuxmoi provides about the stars we stan — a simple book rec feels like we’ve hit a gold mine. For example, if anyone recommends Eckhart Tolle’s The Power of Now, it’s time to log off. Same with Infinite Jest.

    I’m begging him to stopvia Instagram @ncentineo

    During quarantine, we were bombarded with book recs. With nothing to do but wallow about their mansions while we plebes reckoned with the looming financial crisis buoyed only by skimpy stimulus checks, superstars were lounging poolside. But they were hardly wasting away. They were reading.

    Scrolling through Instagram stories, there was a constant flash of popular titles across my phone screen. And for a brief moment in June 2020, I couldn’t escape posts focused bell hook’s All About Love or Robin DiAngelo’s White Fragility. Great picks, don’t get me wrong. But the spines looked suspiciously uncracked to me … and that’s all I’ll say about that.

    I get it, though! It’s tough to carve out time for reading. And when you do, how can you tell what’s worth reading. In the age of BookTok, so many vile books blow up. Who can blame someone for falling victim to a bad rec? Or for proudly proclaiming their love of a vacuous bestseller, imagining that they appear unique. Cringe.

    As someone who has used a few cliched books to embellish my personality in the past, I refuse to throw the first stone. But if I want to know what to read next, I know where not to turn — Noah Centineo, I’m looking at you.

    Yet, beyond the performative intellect, there is hope. Some of our faves really are as introspective and complex as our fantasies make them out to be. They read books — good ones! They appreciate poems — good ones! And they have impeccable taste.

    Here are some celebs with great taste and books you must — simply must — add to your TBR:

    Noname

    Rapper and activist Noname is one of the most avid readers in the music industry. She started Noname Book Club, an online/irl community dedicated to uplifting POC voices by highlighting two books each month written by authors of color. In addition to building community with folks across the country, they also send monthly book picks to incarcerated comrades through their Prison Program.

    Some of the bookclub’s past picks include:

    Reese Witherspoon

    Yes, I said Reese Witherspoon. Her bookclub picks lead to instant popularity — some of which have been adapted by her production company, Hello Sunshine.

    The People’s Princess has already recommended 50+ books, including:

    Tessa Thompson

    Tessa Thompson’s latest project — Viva Maude — is another actress-led production company. When she’s not playing a Marvel Superhero, she’s turning the pages. Luckily for us, her passion for diverse stories will soon mean fantastic movies for us all to enjoy.

    Some of Tessa’s reads:

    Kaia Gerber

    Another celeb with a bookclub is Kaia Gerber — actress, model, and one of my personal favorite nepo babies. Her Instagram-based bookclub flourished during the pandemic, because she invited authors to her Instagram Live show and chat with her millions of followers.

    Some of her top picks include:

    Emily Ratajkowski

    The model turned authoress Emily Ratajkowski recently penned her very own book of essays. All to compliment her own vast reading list — and she has some brilliant picks.

    As an activist and writer, she has a diverse range of titles under her belt including:

    Harry Styles

    Yes, Harry Styles reads too! Harry’s the epitome of the modern man. “A man written by women” — as the internet named his rare breed. So, of course there’s gonna be some strong book recs here. A newbie reading convert, Harry freely confesses that many were recommended to him by the women in his life. Ladies, thank you for your service. His catchy pop hit “Watermelon Sugar” was inspired by Richard Brautigan’s In Watermelon Sugar.

    Here are some of his others:

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    LKC

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