Florence Pugh was named “The British Icon” for the Elle UK Style Awards. I agree, Florence’s style is very… British. I’m actually fine with her style and her short hair and everything – she’s not a carbon copy of the traditional “ingénue,” and she’s very watchable on film and on red carpets. I’m always curious to see what she’s wearing even if I don’t always like it. Florence’s Elle UK cover interview was conducted by her friend Jodie Turner Smith and most of the piece is really just about fashion and body-image and how Pugh DGAF. Some highlights:
She keeps it real: “Having people that can take the p*ss out of me around me keeps me very real. It’s easy, in this industry, to go down the slippery slope of only being around people who compliment you. Knowing who I am – and who I’ve been from the very beginning – has allowed me to feel safe. There’s no grand reveal – it’s just me. Even in my style, I never wanted there to be a filter.
Her personal style: “My friends always laugh when I’m getting ready and I say, ‘I don’t know what to wear. I don’t have any clothes,’ because I have so many clothes. I think what I’m actually saying is, ‘Who do I want to be today?’ I have so many versions of myself that I want to show…And there’s been a big excitement to go all out recently. Red carpets haven’t been this crazy in a long time! Young designers, people like Harris Reed, are like, ‘Why don’t we just look amazing and ridiculous for a night?’ People were so excited to wear his hats.
Her style evolution: I think I’ve always been interested in wearing loud clothing. When I was a teenager, I would buy the most outrageous things and sew them together. I’ve always loved colour. I’ve always wanted to be bold and make a bit of a scene – I don’t think that’s gone away. When I first started doing red carpets, it was really tough. It takes ages to feel comfortable with 50 men all shouting, ‘Picture, over here!’ I’ve become more confident in the last few years, and I think that’s hugely linked to the clothes I’ve been wearing. The more you can enjoy it, the more [people] can see that you’re enjoying it.
Why she talks about her body & her faults: “I speak the way I do about my body because I’m not trying to hide the cellulite on my thigh or the squidge in between my arm and my boob: I would much rather lay it all out. I think the scariest thing for me are the instances where people have been upset that I’ve shown ‘too much’ of myself. When everything went down with the Valentino pink dress a year ago, my nipples were on display through a piece of fabric, and it really wound people up. It’s the freedom that people are scared of; the fact I’m comfortable and happy. Keeping women down by commenting on their bodies has worked for a very long time. I think we’re in this swing now where lots of people are saying, ‘I don’t give a sh-t.’ Unfortunately, we’ve become so terrified of the human body that we can’t even look at my two little cute nipples behind fabric in a way that isn’t sexual. We need to keep reminding everybody that there is more than one reason for women’s bodies [to exist].
“It’s the freedom that people are scared of; the fact I’m comfortable and happy. Keeping women down by commenting on their bodies has worked for a very long time.” She’s right, actually. She’s also right that it’s so ingrained, culturally, that women’s bodies are for display, for objectification, for sexualization, that it’s startling when a woman says “I feel comfortable like this and I don’t give a f–k what anyone says or thinks.” That a woman can wear revealing clothing and it’s not a performance of her sexuality.
Photos courtesy of Avalon Red, Backgrid, and cover courtesy of Elle UK.
Florence is my favorite role model for women. And she’s a great actress too.
I like her acting talent but I don’t care for her fashion.
I love her. She was just on a trip to Japan with her brother and posted the most charming videos to her IG.
I know “free the nipple” is supposed to be some kind of feminist roar but it just seems silly to me. I don’t want to see ANYONE’S nipples. LOL
What’s so bad about nipples? Everyone’s got them. It’s one of the first things babies see in life.
Literally nothing. They’re beautiful. I just have no desire to look at stranger’s nipples and I don’t find the whole “free the nipple” thing to be all that radical or interesting.
I have been bra less for a while.
If you don’t want to see nipples just don’t look at them 😁
I don’t get why anyone would be braless? Wouldn’t your boobs end up sagging?
‘Free the nipple’ was a ban on nipples being shown on Instagram. I’m a very liberal person, but I also think young impressionable girls should be protected from doing things they may live to regret 5-10 years from now. If they decide to start a family or become an accountant, you don’t want pics of your boobs on the internet.
Celebrities can think it’s cool, but they don’t have to live in the real world and get real jobs and they can afford to protect themselves. I don’t care if Florence shows her boobs, but I would care if my teenage niece copied her.
white women have few problems so they make problems. nobody wants to see ANYBODIES nipples or taint yet white women insist on trying to make being nude all the time normalized
Are you for real?! How is this a white woman thing? The outrage that would come if someone said this was a black woman issue. JFC
White people benefit from white privilege. There are white women with real problems. Obviously they’re not mutually exclusive concepts. And I’ve seen Black entertainers on the red carpet showing their entire butt -Ciara- and their butt and nipples- Zoe Kravitz and Rihanna. Sheer and revealing clothes are not just a white woman thing.
Aargh! I remember these kind of interviews with Kate Winslet decades ago. I thought we’d left this all behind. Maybe I’m getting old, but don’t most of us now just do our own thing?
Right? Like nothing she is doing or saying is incredibly radical or new. But she’s young….and Gen Z thinks everything they say or do is the first time anyone has done or said that thing.
@AMEERAH M 🎯😁
Sadly we have NOT moved past any of this. Florence is still getting dragged in similar ways that Kate Winslet and hundreds of other celebrities have been getting dragged for a long time now. Simply because their appearance doesn’t match “someone else’s” idea of perfection. Unfortunately, she is forced to keep adding to the overall conversation because other people keep bringing it up, using her as a negative example.
I can’t imagine being a celebrity in this day & age where thousands of strangers feel compelled to tell you how ugly they think you are, on the internet. It was bad enough when ‘only’ the tabloids pointed that out.
Just my take…
While I get your point and I don’t disagree in general, both Kate and Florence are two beautiful blonde white women. They are in no way subjected to the same type of body-shaming and ridicule that overweight women in the real world are. They just aren’t. So it can read a bit disingenuous and navel-gazing when they speak about their bodies and the bit of cellulite that they have as it’s the most radical thing ever. Florence by MOST people’s standard (and I’m not talking about incels on Twitter) is thin. Kate Winslet has never been larger than a size US 14 – MAYBE.
No I don’t think so. What she says about her being comfortable showing skin and not giving a f what people think is the way I also feel about women’s hair at a certain age. Many of my friends are feeling the pressure to color their hair to hide the grey. Well, I have no problem with any hair color, but I’m not going to color my hair so it so that some strangers think i’m younger, or to be judged for not wanting to look younger, because grey hair is not considered beautiful on women, or sexy. My hair is 30%white on black hair. I don’t care. It’s too bad we’re not is a place where we are free to be what we are without judgement or pressure.
My entire philosophy of dressing comes down to “I feel comfortable like this and I don’t give a f–k what anyone says or thinks.” Admittedly, for me this doesn’t usually have to do with revealing clothes – I look more like an upscale hobo most of the time. But there is so much power in NGAF to that stuff!
Also, personally, I really wish we could get over stuff like the squidge between the arm and the boob. FFS, everyone has that! It’s like that scene where Barbie freaks out over cellulite, lol.
Fighting yourself will get you nowhere and it takes up so much time and energy. Do I wish I could choose where I’m fat and where I’m not? Sure! Am I going to spend money and undergo medical treatment to change things around? Hell no. Buccal fat removal, WTF? Those people are going to look like ghouls eventually. Or just odd. I’ve got the body I’ve got and I dress how I want. Don’t like it? Go look at someone else!
Sorry so many Fs in this comment. The article started it, and I clearly have opinions on this subject, haha!
I have small-breast privilege and I live in the south. I hate hate wearing a bra. So if I wear a tshirt without a bra it’s pointy and obvious. And my mom and others around me shame me very damn time. Like I must want the attention if I’m not wearing a bra. So yeah, you know what, I don’t care if someone wears something sheer with their nipple showing. And for people who do, sorry not sorry.
I don’t know who needs to hear this, but.. I’m not sure why a famous young woman letting the next generation know it’s ok to like yourself how you are, especially in a world of ridiculously unobtainable standards, more so than past generations, would irk anyone. Weird.
“Squidge” is my new favorite word.
I feel like she’s saying stop looking at my tits and I feel like stop showing me them then
i thought it was a throwback victoria beckham photo, to when she had blonde hair! there’s so much about them at the mo.