Rachel Weisz

beautiful - so elegant!
love that shot from behind, the pink satin gown set against the verdant landscape is just lovely.
she suits classic and elegant, a timelessness...
 
Rachel Weisz attends the Chloe show as part of the Paris Fashion Week Womenswear Spring/Summer 2018 on September 28, 2017 in Paris, France.

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zimbio.com
 
RACHEL WEISZ and Daniel Craig Night Out in New York 10/02/2017

credit: hawtcelebs
 
The Tribeca Chanel Women’s Filmmaker Program Luncheon in NYC, October 17



celebmafia
 
Rachel Weisz Attends The 2017 New Yorker Festival - Rachel Weisz Talks With Hilton Als at SVA Theatre on October 7, 2017 in New York City.

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NEW YORK, NY - NOVEMBER 27: Actor Rachel Weisz attends IFP's 27th Annual Gotham Independent Film Awards on November 27, 2017 in New York City. (Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for IFP)
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She actually looks better with short hair, i'm not a fan of her style but she's pretty. (the last pictures are not really flattering though)..
 
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A frigid Friday morning in Manhattan’s East Village, and I’m in a tiny Italian coffee shop awaiting Rachel Weisz.

The studenty, ever-so-slightly grimy locale is not, it must be said, the first place you’d expect to see an A-lister. ‘People who’ve been here a long time say it’s more gentrified, posher, whiter. Fewer drug addicts. But it’s still quite mixed,’ announces Weisz when she arrives, still bundled up in hat and coat. ‘It’s not all white privileged people.’

For 47-year-old Weisz, the ability to remain relatively incognito is a large part of the appeal of living in this neighbourhood. Much is always made of her beauty and there’s no denying that, even dressed down in wide-legged jeans and a jumper, make-up free, she is stare-across-the-room striking. But there are no stares today. In fact, nobody seems to notice the Oscar-winner slinking over to my table. In keeping with this inconspicuous demeanour, she seems rather keener on asking questions than answering them. Why am I in New York, she asks, pulling off her gloves. Where am I from in England? How long have I lived here? Do I like it? Will I stay?

In spite of having lived in New York herself for 16 years, her innate Britishness remains intact. She swiftly extols the virtues of the NHS (‘Of course it’s flawed and overstretched and there are immense problems, but it does actually work’), Radio 4 (’I can’t cook without it on, I just freeze up’) and Stormzy (‘I think he’s brilliant. My godson introduced me to him a couple of years ago’). I ask if she could ever see herself living back in London, once her 11-year-old son, Henry — whose father is her former fiancé, the director Darren Aronofsky — has finished school. ‘Yeah, I’d probably go back to the UK,’ she nods. ‘I’m sort of half here and half there anyway. And my last four films have all been made there.’

The latest of these films is The Mercy, due in cinemas next month, the true story of amateur sailor Donald Crowhurst’s disastrous attempt to sail single-handedly around the world in 1968-69. Colin Firth plays Crowhurst, Weisz his wife, Clare, whom he abandons for over nine months, along with their two children while he sets out to win the race.

Clare’s admirable stoicism, and acceptance of her husband’s rather foolhardy ambition, is what attracted Weisz to the role. ‘She’s extraordinary, not a whingey wife at all. And I found the whole idea that if you really love someone, you’ve got to let them do what they want very moving. She says to her kids that if you love someone, you can’t just love one part of them — you’ve got to love all of them.’

Her tea arrives. ‘I’m not that person,’ she openly admits. ‘I wouldn’t be that stoic. I’m much more vulnerable than she is.’ How would she react, I ask, if her own husband announced he was leaving to traverse the globe for a year? ‘Not well.’ She frowns and shakes her thick thatch of dark hair. ‘Not well at all.’

While he may not be about to set sail solo in a 40-foot yacht, Weisz’s husband is, of course, the ultimate action hero — on screen, at least. She and James Bond himself, Daniel Craig, began dating in December 2010 after they starred together in the film Dream House, and married just six months later. Both are notoriously private about their relationship, with Weisz rarely ever answering questions about her marriage. Has marriage changed her, I ask, somewhat tentatively? ‘I don’t know how to answer that,’ she says, casting her eyes around the room. ‘I mean, I wear a ring all the time. I wear my ring with pride. I’m taken.’



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A frigid Friday morning in Manhattan’s East Village, and I’m in a tiny Italian coffee shop awaiting Rachel Weisz.

The studenty, ever-so-slightly grimy locale is not, it must be said, the first place you’d expect to see an A-lister. ‘People who’ve been here a long time say it’s more gentrified, posher, whiter. Fewer drug addicts. But it’s still quite mixed,’ announces Weisz when she arrives, still bundled up in hat and coat. ‘It’s not all white privileged people.’

For 47-year-old Weisz, the ability to remain relatively incognito is a large part of the appeal of living in this neighbourhood. Much is always made of her beauty and there’s no denying that, even dressed down in wide-legged jeans and a jumper, make-up free, she is stare-across-the-room striking. But there are no stares today. In fact, nobody seems to notice the Oscar-winner slinking over to my table. In keeping with this inconspicuous demeanour, she seems rather keener on asking questions than answering them. Why am I in New York, she asks, pulling off her gloves. Where am I from in England? How long have I lived here? Do I like it? Will I stay?

In spite of having lived in New York herself for 16 years, her innate Britishness remains intact. She swiftly extols the virtues of the NHS (‘Of course it’s flawed and overstretched and there are immense problems, but it does actually work’), Radio 4 (’I can’t cook without it on, I just freeze up’) and Stormzy (‘I think he’s brilliant. My godson introduced me to him a couple of years ago’). I ask if she could ever see herself living back in London, once her 11-year-old son, Henry — whose father is her former fiancé, the director Darren Aronofsky — has finished school. ‘Yeah, I’d probably go back to the UK,’ she nods. ‘I’m sort of half here and half there anyway. And my last four films have all been made there.’
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Cover: Rachel Weisz photographed and styled by Bay Garnett. Balenciaga coat, POA (balenciaga.com). H SAMUEL earrings, £49.99 (hsamuel.co.uk)

The latest of these films is The Mercy, due in cinemas next month, the true story of amateur sailor Donald Crowhurst’s disastrous attempt to sail single-handedly around the world in 1968-69. Colin Firth plays Crowhurst, Weisz his wife, Clare, whom he abandons for over nine months, along with their two children while he sets out to win the race.

Clare’s admirable stoicism, and acceptance of her husband’s rather foolhardy ambition, is what attracted Weisz to the role. ‘She’s extraordinary, not a whingey wife at all. And I found the whole idea that if you really love someone, you’ve got to let them do what they want very moving. She says to her kids that if you love someone, you can’t just love one part of them — you’ve got to love all of them.’

Read more

Rachel Weisz tells Graham Norton: ‘I was expelled from school’

Her tea arrives. ‘I’m not that person,’ she openly admits. ‘I wouldn’t be that stoic. I’m much more vulnerable than she is.’ How would she react, I ask, if her own husband announced he was leaving to traverse the globe for a year? ‘Not well.’ She frowns and shakes her thick thatch of dark hair. ‘Not well at all.’

While he may not be about to set sail solo in a 40-foot yacht, Weisz’s husband is, of course, the ultimate action hero — on screen, at least. She and James Bond himself, Daniel Craig, began dating in December 2010 after they starred together in the film Dream House, and married just six months later. Both are notoriously private about their relationship, with Weisz rarely ever answering questions about her marriage. Has marriage changed her, I ask, somewhat tentatively? ‘I don’t know how to answer that,’ she says, casting her eyes around the room. ‘I mean, I wear a ring all the time. I wear my ring with pride. I’m taken.’
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The Weisz stuff: top row, from left, CHRISTIAN DIOR top, £3,000 (dior.com). GIVENCHY boots, £1,407 (givenchy.com). HANRO top, £65.50 (hanro.co.uk) Middle row, LEVI’s vintage top, £55, at vestiaire collective.com. HANRO top, as before; BALENCIAGA bag, £1,315, balenciaga.com. Blazer, stylist’s own; HANRO top, as before; LEVI’S vintage jeans, £110, at vestiaire collective.com Bottom row, HANRO top and BALENCIAGA bag, both as before. CHLOÉ dress, POA (chloe.com). CHRISTIAN DIOR top, £3,000 (dior.com)

I try a different tack, asking about marriage as an institution, one she had avoided for decades. ‘You don’t join the institution like it’s the Rotary Club,’ she quips. ‘You make it your own. It’s very personal, it’s very private. I don’t think mine’s particularly exceptional apart from that we’re both in the public eye.’

She pauses. ‘But I never thought I would get married. It was not an ambition of mine. It was the opposite. I couldn’t relate to romantic comedies — marriage seems to be the whole point of them. Then it just happened, happily, at a more mature moment.’

Rachel Weisz grew up in ‘a very liberal Jewish household’ in Hampstead Garden Suburb. Her father, George, who emigrated from Hungary, was a mechanical engineer who also invented things, such as an artificial respirator powered by its own oxygen, while her mother, Edith, was a psychotherapist from Vienna who converted from Catholicism when they married.

As a teenager, she attended a series of ‘posh white girls’ schools’, including Benenden and the North London Collegiate School, the latter of which she was ‘asked to leave’. She did not, she says ‘try to burn it down or anything. I was just not responding to authority in any way’. That changed when she went to St Paul’s Girls’ School for A-Levels, where she found inspiration in her English teacher, Janet Gough. ‘It’s one of those magical teacher stories; she changed the course of my life. Completely. Totally.’

She went on to study at Cambridge where she was famously known as ‘The Trinity Hall Heartbreaker’ and where she began to act, setting up an avant-garde experimental theatre group, which won awards at the Edinburgh Fringe. She made her name with 1999’s surprise hit The Mummy in which she played clumsy librarian Evelyn Carnahan. The Constant Gardener, six years later, won her both acclaim and an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress.

Somewhat incongruously, given her self-confessed issues with authority, Weisz also worked as a model when she was just 14. ‘I wanted to be very independent, I was trying to earn my own money and, at the time, it seemed quite glamorous, like it would give me access to power or something,’ she shrugs. ‘But you have to be very disciplined — successful models work very, very hard. I was not a good model.’

Henry will soon be a teenager; would she be happy to let him try his hand at modelling, too? ‘Over my dead body,’ she replies, instantly and very firmly. ‘He can do a paper round or something, but not photographs. No. He’s a child.’ Her son’s privacy is of paramount importance to Weisz. ‘I generally don’t talk about him. He didn’t choose to have a mum who’s in the public eye, so I keep him away from my career. He’s also not very interested in it,’ she says, laughing.

Weisz herself spends ‘a lot of time on my non-work life’ too. She is in a book club with other mothers at Henry’s school. ‘And I see a lot of plays, a lot of films, a lot of friends. I cook Sunday lunches, have people over with their kids. People reading this in England will go: “Yeah and?”, so can you please explain the difference?’ she requests. ‘It’s much more formal here. People arrange to meet in a restaurant. There’s less of that thing of just putting a chicken in the oven and the kids running around, and it being a bit more messy and informal.’

Later this year, Weisz will be seen in The Favourite, alongside Olivia Colman and Emma Stone, playing Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough — the right-hand woman of Colman’s Queen Anne. ‘I’m her best friend, adviser and lover. And I enjoyed all of them,’ declares a beaming Weisz. And, after almost 25 years in front of the camera, she is now stepping behind it, too, developing and producing her own films, the first of which, Disobedience, is due out this spring. ‘It’s just a completely different muscle,’ she says of the producing process. ‘It feels like I play two sports now instead of one: acting and producing, like volleyball and football, and it’s really fulfilling.’ Other high-profile actresses, including Reese Witherspoon, Sandra Bullock, Nicole Kidman and Gemma Arterton, have all made similar moves into producing in recent years, many citing a lack of female-driven stories as well as a dearth of decent roles for women as the impetus.


Do the plum roles get harder to find after a certain age? ‘Well, I’m not sure the ingenue roles are that great either,’ Weisz says, dryly. ‘Someone asked me 10 years ago, did I want to develop material, and I just didn’t know. I didn’t have a sense of the story I wanted to tell, so it just took me a little while to get there.’

Disobedience would seem to be the perfect story for Weisz to tell. Based on the novel of the same name by Naomi Alderman (author of The Power), it is the story of a north London rabbi’s lesbian daughter who returns home to her Orthodox community after living in New York. ‘It’s respectful to the details of faith, but it could have been a Muslim community, or a very Christian family,’ notes Weisz, who stars as the central character, Ronit Krushka, alongside Rachel McAdams and Alessandro Nivola. ‘It’s about faith, and sexuality, existential freedom, choosing the family that you want — it asks lots of big old questions.’

Read more: https://www.standard.co.uk/lifestyl...dynamics-and-longing-for-london-a3748606.html
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JFK Airport.

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Actress Rachel Weisz attends Through Her Lens: The Tribeca Chanel Women's Filmmaker Program Celebration at Smyth Hotel on October 19, 2017 in New York City.

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Actress Rachel Weisz attends 'The Mercy' World Premiere at The Curzon Mayfair on February 6, 2018 in London, England.

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Rachel Weisz poses in the press room during the EE British Academy Film Awards (BAFTA) held at Royal Albert Hall on February 18, 2018 in London, England.
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Hair, make up and that face:heart::blush:
But the dress isn't doing her any favor, just like the Miu Miu for the premiere.
 
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