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#Annie Leibovitz
nobrashfestivity · 2 months
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Annie Leibovitz Annie Oakley's Heart Target, Private Collection, Los Angeles, California, 2010
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mrmousetolliver · 24 days
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Keith Haring (1986) by Annie Leibovitz
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a-state-of-bliss · 9 days
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Vogue US May 2024 - Zendaya by Annie Leibovitz
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/ Annie Leibovitz, Pete Seeger, Croton-on-Hudson, New York, 2001
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voguefashion · 2 months
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Cate Blanchett photographed by Annie Leibovitz for American Vogue, December 2004.
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rolloroberson · 8 months
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Lily Tomlin photographed by Annie Leibovitz
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carloskaplan · 8 months
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Patti Smith fotografada por Annie Leibovitz no Café de Flore (2011)
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las-microfisuras · 7 months
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Annie Leibovitz.
Ricky Lee Jones and Sal Berardi, 1981
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zegalba · 3 months
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Rei Kawakubo for Vogue US (1997) Photography: Annie Leibovitz
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jeannemoreau · 7 months
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KATE WINSLET photographed by Annie Leibovitz for Vogue, October 2023.
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robertocustodioart · 8 months
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Uma Thurman by Annie Leibovitz 1996
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fadedday · 7 months
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Mariel Hemingway by Annie Leibovitz
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le-jolie · 7 months
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Angelina Jolie photographed by Annie Leibovitz for Vogue, November 2023
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a-state-of-bliss · 9 days
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Vogue US May 2024 - Zendaya by Annie Leibovitz
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Andrew Scott, Vogue: April 2024.
by Zing Tsjeng, Photos by Annie Leibovitz
Ripley, in other words, is the hero of the tale. “That’s why he fascinates so many,” says Scott. “There’s been so many iterations of him. I think it’s because people root for him.” Actors like Alain Delon and Dennis Hopper have tried the role; Matt Damon played him as an obsequious, lower-class naïf; John Malkovich, as a slimy, camp killer. Scott’s Ripley is different; a watchful loner escaping rodent-infested poverty, more at home among art than he is around people. Musician and actor Johnny Flynn plays his first victim—the monied Dickie Greenleaf—and Dakota Fanning is Dickie’s suspicious ex-girlfriend. “I find Tom quite vulnerable,” Scott tells me. “I don’t think he’s necessarily lonely, but I certainly think he’s solitary…. He seems to me by his nature that he just can’t fit in. He’s trying to survive.”
In Ripley, Zaillian extracts maximum Hitchcockian dread from every creaky footstep. But most sinister of all is Scott’s face, which exhibits a sharklike steeliness throughout. It’s a performance that exudes queasy force. Is Ripley a scammer, a psychopath, or both? “There’s so many things lurking beneath him that I’ve been very reluctant to diagnose him with anything. I never thought of him as a sociopath or murderous,” Scott declares. “It’s up to everybody else to characterize him or call him whatever they want.”
As we weave through tourists near the Tower of London, barely anybody notices Scott, save for a faint glimmer of recognition among mainly young women. He seems to draw reassurance from it. “I don’t like to think about it too much, if I’m honest,” he muses of fame. “I find it a little bit, er, frightening.” He is known but not blockbuster-recognizable, although he is in the upcoming Back in Action with Cameron Diaz and Jamie Foxx. What stunts did he do? “I can’t give that away, I’m afraid, or somebody from Netflix will come and shoot me in the head.”
What’s been on Scott’s mind the most hasn’t been acting at all, in fact, but art. As a 17-year-old, he was offered his first movie role on the same day he was given a scholarship to study painting. He chose acting, but has recently been thinking about Oliver Burkeman’s philosophical self-help tract from 2021, Four Thousand Weeks, which makes the case for focusing on the five things you truly want to accomplish. “For me at the moment, it’s like, What do you want to do? What do you want to say?”
He scrolls through his phone to show me his work. There’s a watercolor of a couple arguing in a restaurant in rich reds and greens, line drawings of friends and people on the beach, and two self-portraits. “It’s a bit weird,” he acknowledges of his depiction of himself, all bulbous forehead and Pan-like tufts of hair. His brisk, nervy lines are reminiscent of Egon Schiele or Francis Bacon, who turns out to be one of his favorite painters. “Well, God, I’ll take that,” he mutters at the comparison. He would like someday to go to art school. “I don’t ever regret it,” he says of acting. “But I suppose you just get to a stage where you think, What else? That’s one of the big painful things in life for me, where you can’t quite live all the lives.” As he gets older, he feels the tug toward revisiting old working relationships, including with Waller-Bridge: “We’ve definitely got things cooking,” he smiles. “I’d love to work with her again. She’s just a singular, wonderful person.” For her part, Waller-Bridge says: “I’d love to see him do a fully unhinged slapstick comedy character. Someone who is outraged at everything, all of the time.”
As we round the pavement and the Tate Modern looms back into sight, he recalls a poster he received in 2017—a monstrously large graphic that detailed every week in a human life span. “It’s your entire life if you live to 80—you have to fill in all the bits that you’ve already lived,” he remembers in awe, “a visually terrifying gift.” What did he do with it? “I didn’t hold on to it for too long.” Easy come, easy go: We finally finish our loop around the Thames and, as Scott disappears back into the throng, anonymous just the way he likes it, it occurs to me that the actor has many lives to live yet. ■
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voguefashion · 9 months
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Linda Ronstadt photographed by Annie Leibovitz for Rolling Stone magazine, December 2nd 1976.
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