Cate Blanchett has been promoting her new movie Tár, which is up for a lot of awards this year.
On Monday, the beauty looked stunning on the cover of one of W MagazineCovers of the editions of Best Performances. In the interview, the 53-year-old actress wore an elegant black dress and messy blonde hair as she spoke about Tár.
After its release last year, she was rumored to nab her second Best Actress Oscar for her performance as Lydia Tár, a brilliant composer-director in the psychological thriller drama.
Cover and screen icon: Cate Blanchett, 53, looked stunning on the cover as one of the features of W magazine’s Best Performances issue.
On the cover, the two-time Academy Award-winning star donned a strapless black dress with a structured skirt that dramatically emphasized her hips.
Another photo from the editorial shoot showed her wearing a pair of opaque black tights.
In the shot, she seemed to be nonchalantly donning a unique pair of shoes, seemingly a symbol of her ability to fully and exceptionally play a rare character.
Best Performance: At the upcoming annual performance, the actress, 53, rocked a sleek black dress and messy blonde hair as she discussed her latest film Tár; she later dons a unique pair of shoes in an apparently symbolic way
She wore a light makeup look and showed off her iconic blonde hair in a short cut, parted on the side.
One of his latest projects, the film Tár, was written and directed by 58-year-old Todd Field, and was his first film in 16 years.
She told W about the filmmaker who wrote the script just for her: “Todd sent me this script and I just inhaled it.”
Oscar Rumors: After its release last year, she was rumored to nab her second Oscar for Best Actress for her performance playing Lydia Tár, a brilliant composer-director in the psychological thriller drama.
“He wrote it at the beginning of the pandemic,” he said. “Todd was a musician first, so there was a musical quality to the script, and not just because it’s set in the world of classical music.”
Then the star, who won the coveted Best Actress award at the Venice Film Festival for her performance in the film, hits on the moral of the story.
“It could just as easily be an architect, or a painter, or a writer – anyone in a position of high institutional power, and the way that being in that position interferes with your sense of self and your ability to relate to people.” ,’ she said.
Written for her: She told W of the filmmaker who wrote the script just for her: “Todd sent me this script and I inhaled it.”
Later, she seeks to be praised and recognized in the art world.
“We respect it and we understand it in athletes,” he said.
“But if you talk about it in more ephemeral art forms, everyone has a different version of what’s good or great.”
He added: “In a creative job, you have to be pretty brutal with yourself and disciplined.”
The Art: She said, “Todd was a musician first, so there was a musical quality to the script, and not just because it’s set in the world of classical music.”
She continued: ‘And when, as a conductor, your instrument is a human instrument, how do you maintain that sense of rigor and brutality?
“It’s a complicated thing, balancing being a musician, an artist and also being a human,” he said.
‘I’m trying to learn to be a human being.’
Tár received its big theatrical release in October last year.
She said: “It’s a tricky thing, balancing being a musician, an artist, and also being a human.”