Freida Pinto | Page 24 | the Fashion Spot

Freida Pinto

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Wow! Have had so much fun browsing through this thread for the past hour. :heart:
 
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(justjared)
 
She and Dev look great on the cover of EW.

I looove her Vogue India cover - she look stunning! Can anyone ID her outfit?
 
^ Thank you!

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Left: Freida Pinto on Vogue India March 2009
Right: Louis Vuitton, Spring 2009


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Left: Blumarine, Spring 2009
Right: Freida Pinto in Cosmopolitan India March 2009

highheelconfidential
 
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she looks beautiful on the EW cover... hardly any work done on it I think.
 
The Insider:Freida Pinto
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THE INSIDER: FREIDA PINTO
The former model wants nothing more than to be an actress. A role in Slumdog is a good way to start.

If the first two months are any indication, 2009 is going to be a good year for Freida Pinto: The film in which she made her acting debut, Slumdog Millionaire, just picked up eight Oscars at the award show Sunday night, her next project is slated to be a Woody Allen flick, and she has yet to make a fashion misstep in any of her major appearances. NYLON sat down with the star to find out just what it was like filming the blockbuster movie—and why she cried the first time she watched it.

Not to give it away, but at the end of director Danny Boyle’s latest film, Slumdog Millionaire, the entire cast bursts into song. They dance, too, flamboyantly and unselfconsciously and with much twirling of brightly colored scarves. It’s an unfamiliar sight in a Western film, but a common one in Bollywood cinema (where, actually, there’s usually a lot more of it).

“In a way, that ending is like an ode to Bollywood,” says actress Freida Pinto, who plays Latika in the film—a character whom the hero, Jamal Malik (Dev Patel, in a breakout performance), spends most of his time trying to find. “The film industry in India is loud, and escapist, and huge—you can get lost in it. People there see the poverty everyday, they don’t want to go to the theater and see more of it. But there are real people around you, and real stories that need to be addressed. And that’s what Danny has done with this film.”

Set in Mumbai (which is the current name for Bombay; many residents still call it that), Slumdog Millionaire tells the story of Jamal, a boy from the ghetto, who finds himself as a contestant on the Indian incarnation of Who Want to Be a Millionaire? As the questions keep coming, Jamal realizes that he has encountered the answers during his difficult life. The story of his childhood is subsequently told through flashbacks and, as he gets closer to the grand prize, he comes to capture the imagination of an entire nation.

It might not sound like anything special on paper, but the film is a triumph—a sweeping tribute to a country that doesn’t shy from its less appealing aspects. “Danny just loved the slums and the train stations, and those are places you avoid because it’s so crowded,” says Pinto. “They’re gross and hot, and sticky. But I think he loved them more than his hotel room.”

“I wanted it to feel like you were seeing it from the character’s perspective, not mine,” says Boyle. “I didn’t want to be an observer of it, I wanted to be immersed in it, and experience it. I didn’t try to control Mumbai; you can’t. You’ve just got to go with it and faith in it. And that’s kind of what I felt about Freida. She was inexperienced, but I had this instinct about her. From the first time I saw her audition tape I had this reaction—and I remember it happening when I was making Trainspotting with Kelly MacDonald—I just remember thinking, ‘I bet that’s her.’”

It couldn’t be a better start to a film career for Pinto, who was born in Mumbai and prior to Slumdog, had modeled and hosted a travel show. “I kind of cried when I watched it from the first time,” she says, relaxing into a leather couch in a Manhattan photo studio (in three hours she would be on a plane back to India). “I knew it was so stupid crying watching myself, but I was just really happy that this happened to me, in my first film. It’s kind of like a dream. It’s not sinking in yet.”

Staying true to the country he was filming in was so important to Boyle that he even cast children from the streets to play the young Latika and Jamal. “We’ve set it up so they can be put through schooling now,” he says. “And if they complete their schooling, at 16, then quite a considerable amount of money will be released to them. It’s great to give something back, because we got so much from them.”

“In India we grow up around this poverty,” says Pinto, “and you can get desensitized to it, to the point where it doesn’t melt you anymore—it doesn’t break your heart. But this film is extraordinary. It goes deep inside and touches your heart; if it didn’t, it wouldn’t be Danny’s film.”
LUKE CRISELL

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Source:nylonmag.com
 
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(indiabuzz.abc news.variety)
 
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Those nylon pictures are so unflattering & awkward! That floral dress looks frumpy, the whole outfit looks very badly styled. Disappointing considering how much better the Vogue shoot is
 
Those nylon pictures are so unflattering & awkward! That floral dress looks frumpy, the whole outfit looks very badly styled. Disappointing considering how much better the Vogue shoot is

I agree. In the first two, she looks a bit sickly.
 

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