Eddie Redmayne

Glad he made the tux his own, with his gold buttons, textured shirt, and slippers. Who is his stylist? He obviously has taste and a brain of his own where style is concerned, but they deserve some credit too. Best dressed man in Hollywood, by far.
 
Agreed, Eddie is always dressed so impeccable.

Like Wolkfolk mentioned I think Eddie deserves way more recognition for his role as Marius in Les Mis. Anne did great but she got so much buzz when a lot of the cast did just as good if not better.
 
Is this the most photogenic man alive? Sheesh! And his clothes always look sharp, even if they would look ridiculous on most other men. He definitely has something, doesn't he?

I also just realised I was at uni with him, in pretty much the polar opposite subject. Missed my chance! ;)
 
It's not much of a surprise, Eddie once again looked incredibly put together and handsome in his tux last night. I love his shoes, I think they are a bit quirky, and they just make the look go a bit above and beyond what a lot of the other men wore.

And I agree with you two, I still think it's a bit of a shame that Eddie didn't get as much recognition for his portrayal of Marius. While of course I cried during Anne's, "I Dreamed a Dream" (I mean, how could you not cry?), but for me, one of the major standout moments was "Empty Chairs at Empty Tables." It gave me chills both times I saw the film. But I guess that's what happens when a film has such a great cast, some people don't always get their due, it's unfortunate but to be expected.
 
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At the Oscar rehearsals with Aaron

[FONT=&quot]twitter: AmandaSeyfried[/FONT]
 
As we said in our round-up from last night's Academy Awards, Eddie Redmayne has proven to be this awards season's MVP, stepping on to each red carpet in perfectly fitted rigs that expertly walk the line between modern and traditional. This year's Oscars were no different, with Redmayne's Alexander McQueen getup easily being one of the evening's best. But a closer look reveals some stellar details that are lost from afar, like those gold monkey fist studs on his shirt, badass barbed wire McQueen cufflinks, sleek gold case Omega watch, and subtle McQueen skull slippers. It all makes us appreciate Redmayne's efforts even more, while simultaneously forcing us to wonder why other celebs can't take a risk or two with as much ease.

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gq.com
 
I thought Anne was brilliant in Les Mis and her Oscar was well deserved but Eddie was better. I cried so much when he sang.
 
I love the gold buttons and cufflinks. Very subtle but nice touch. The slippers are pretty cool too.
 
By far the best dressed guy at the Oscars (and in Hollywood, for that matter). So elegant and sharp, love him.

And I agree with you guys, he was ridiculously underrated on Les Mis. After Anne he was the best on the movie, his performance of Empty Chairs at Empty Tables was heartbreaking. At least he got a nice exposure, hope he gets a lot of great roles after it.
 
He really is an inspiration, very stylish and dashing but always 100% effortless. I love that he really dares on the red carpet and his attention to details is very refrshing to see on an actor.
 
Glad he made the tux his own, with his gold buttons, textured shirt, and slippers. Who is his stylist? He obviously has taste and a brain of his own where style is concerned, but they deserve some credit too. Best dressed man in Hollywood, by far.

You know, I have always wondered that too. I've been looking around and reading anything I find about his style but I have yet to find his stylist.
 
W Magazine April 2013



The New Guard: Hollywood's Freshest Faces
Celebs: Brit Marling, Eddie Redmayne & Emayatzy Corinealdi
Photographer: Alasdair McLellan
Stylist: Edward Enninful
Hair: Jimmy Paul
Make Up: Aaron De Mey




The New Guard: Eddie Redmayne
By Lynn Hirschberg

Eddie Redmayne, who sings, leads a revolution, and breaks hearts in the movie version of Les Misérables, was staring at an abstract landscape by Gustav Klimt at the Neue Galerie in Manhattan on a freezing afternoon in early February. “Look at that,” he said, pointing to a small bright blue patch in the upper left corner of the canvas. Redmayne, who is 31 but has the boyish exuberance of the perpetually curious, majored in art history at Cambridge and wrote his dissertation on the artist Yves Klein and his signature color: a pure electric blue that nearly matches the shade in the Klimt. “I’m color-blind, but I can pick out that blue anywhere,” Redmayne said and walked toward the painting in a sort of trance. “I wrote 30,000 words on this color, and I never grew tired of it. The pigment is staggering. It’s amazing that a color can be so emotional. One can only hope to achieve that intensity in acting.”

Redmayne stared at the blue. He is tall and lanky and was dressed in shades of fall: tan corduroy pants, brown sweater, khaki jacket, with a dark green muffler looped around his neck. He began visiting the Neue seven years ago, when he was in New York to audition for the film The Good Shepherd, in which he played Angelina Jolie’s son. “I doubt it was my acting—I have my big lips to thank for getting cast,” Redmayne said. He turned his attention to an Egon Schiele cityscape. “I am fascinated by Schiele,” he continued, peeking behind a black curtain blocking the closed gallery next door. Before the guard could stop him from entering the room where the more autobiographical Schieles are displayed, Redmayne backed up. “The sexuality of Schiele’s drawings is still shocking,” he said, disappointed that he couldn’t see them that day. “We all think we’ve seen everything, and then you look at Schiele’s work and are stunned by how evocative and raw it is.”

Like his taste in art, which encompasses the refined and the rough, Redmayne seems to be split between worlds when it comes to his career: He recently portrayed Shakespeare’s Richard II onstage in London, but in his second film, Savage Grace, he was cast as a repressed gay man who has sex with his mother and kills her. “My trajectory has always been a little bipolar—I’m caught between the Elizabethans and the crazies,” Redmayne said. We headed downstairs to Café *Sabarsky, the Viennese restaurant in the museum. “I heard about the auditions for Les Mis while I was in a field in North Carolina shooting a movie called Hick, in which I play a pedophile meth addict from Texas with a limp,” he said. “I was in my Winne*bago dressed in a cowboy costume, and I took my iPhone and filmed myself singing my character Marius’s big song.”

It worked: He got the part. Marius is often played as a handsome male *ingénu, but Redmayne brought out the complexity of the character. “Three people die because of Marius,” he said as he ordered Wiener schnitzel and a glass of white wine. “He has to bear that weight.” Redmayne smiled. “When I was a boy, I was so jealous of Gavroche, the youngest revolutionary. I wanted to be him. Gavroche and Les Mis may be why I became an actor.”

When Redmayne was 11, his parents allowed him to audition for a London stage production of Oliver! “I had one line,” he said, still sounding proud. “Here it is: ‘Books you ordered from the bookseller, sir.’ I was elated and terrified. That musical was like a rite of passage. Half the cast of Les Mis were in some production of Oliver! That experience sticks with you: I can still do my audition dance.” During his second year at Cambridge, Redmayne was cast as Viola in an all-male Shakespeare’s Globe production of Twelfth Night. “I was a boy playing a girl playing a boy,” he recalled. “I had to wear a whalebone corset. To this day, when actresses on set start whining to me about the pain of their corsets, I say, ‘I’ve been there. It’s not that bad.’ ”

Thanks to Twelfth Night, Redmayne got an agent. After school ended, however, he had a crisis over what to do with his life. He decided to give himself a year to try acting, to see what would happen. Four months later he was cast in a play, and a year and a half after that he got The Good Shepherd. Although he has worked steadily, a few years ago Redmayne was once again feeling conflicted about his profession. In 2009, he was sent the script for Red, John Logan’s play about the artist Mark Rothko and his assistant. A meditation on mentors, genius, and the creative process, Red reminded Redmayne of his school thesis on Klein’s blue. “And Klein worked in red too,” Redmayne said, as if it were a sign. Night after night, Redmayne’s character, the assistant, would engage Rothko on *existential subjects while mixing paint, hoping to come up with Rothko’s perfect hue. “During the production, I became a parody of myself,” Redmayne joked. “I lived on St. Mark’s Place in the East Village and started painting. Red restored my faith in acting.”

Redmayne finished eating, polishing off a slice of dark-chocolate Sacher torte. He had a plane to catch—he was heading home to London and then to the Berlin International Film Festival and eventually back to the States for the Academy Awards in Los Angeles. He had just been cast in the Wachowski siblings’ next project, Jupiter Ascending, opposite Channing Tatum and Mila Kunis. The movie is shrouded in secrecy, but Redmayne revealed that his character is “not so nice.” He smiled. “It’s time for the darkness to return. I kind of miss it.”
wmagazine
 
So... 3 months later I saw him for second time (it was yesterday). I think his chasing me :lol:
How can he be so lovely? Seriously, he's really kind, he didn't mind to take pictures and talk with his fans.
I love him! Always so kind, smiling, perfectly dressed, such a gentleman... :crush: He's perfect!! Isn't him?
 

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