January 16, 2026

Brendan Fraser, Mari Yamamoto, Shannon Mahina Gorman, Takehiro Hira

Words by JANE CROWTHER


Brendan Fraser’s innate likeability is tapped for feel-good warmth in this lightweight drama following a washed-up actor eking out a living in Tokyo and finding an unexpected sense of family. Fraser plays the thesp, Phillip Vanderploeg, with the same sweetness he deployed in The Whale – less gay porn and gorging, but that perennially hopeful expression as he takes unfulfilling bit parts and shonky commercials, the glory days that brought him to Japan clearly long gone. When he’s called to play ‘sad American’ at a funeral (a lovely piece of physical comedy from Fraser as he uncomfortably tries to be inobtrusive) a new world of acting opens up. 

Brendan Fraser, Mari Yamamoto, Shannon Mahina Gorman, Takehiro Hira
James Lisle/Searchlight Pictures

A rental service run by Shinji (Takehiro Hira) offers him a gig as a ‘token white guy’ taking on roles in real people’s lives. Need a fake boyfriend, fake boss, fake journalist to prevent embarrassment at social gatherings? Call big Phil. After a stumble playing a groom to a gay bride who is trying to mollify her trad parents, Phillip gets into the swing of turning up into domestic situations and putting his actor training to good use. So he’s easy-breezy when he’s booked to play a fake dad to a young girl, Mia,(Shannon Mahina Gorman) whose single mum thinks having two parents will go over better for a posh school application. Mia isn’t told of the ruse, she thinks Phillip is her real father, returned after an absence and, after a bumpy start, the duo start to gel. What could possibly go wrong?

Brendan Fraser, Mari Yamamoto, Shannon Mahina Gorman, Takehiro Hira
James Lisle/Searchlight Pictures

Following a well-worn arc, this gentle comedy-drama may not surprise, but that it moves nonetheless is down to Fraser’s delightful screen presence. Whether squashed into the Japanese metro or watching the lives of his neighbours from his apartment window, Fraser exudes a forlorn yearning and optimism for connection that is immediately endearing. When he arrives in his clients’ lives he is respectful, engaged, gentle – less a conman than a guardian angel, his good intentions shining from his open face. And when he begins to bond with Mia, Phillip’s own childhood is revealed, adding emotional depth to a trope as old as Chaplin’s The Kid. Plus, in terms of travel porn, Rental Family makes Japan look beguiling; from a cosy izakaya and a quirky cat festival to Tokyo twinkling neon at night, to karaoke bars and lush green forests. It’s a trip worth taking.

Brendan Fraser, Mari Yamamoto, Shannon Mahina Gorman, Takehiro Hira
James Lisle/Searchlight Pictures

Pictures courtesy of Searchlight Pictures
Rental Family is in cinemas now

83rd Golden Globes, Golden Globes, Hollywood Authentic, Los Angeles
Jennifer Lopez, Timothée Chalamet

It was the night of Paul Thomas Anderson’s thriller, One Battle After Another, as the film scooped awards for best comedy or musical film, best director and screenplay at the Beverly Hilton on Sunday evening’s 83rd Golden Globe Awards. Teyana Taylor (in custom Schiaparelli) also claimed best supporting actress for her role in the film as anarchist Perdita Beverly Hills. The LA hotel’s usual red carpet was a sweeping staircase this year, allowing gowns to drape over the steps and in the case of Dwayne Johnson, stroll down with a glass of tequila. 

83rd Golden Globes, Golden Globes, Hollywood Authentic, Los Angeles
Paul Thomas Anderson
83rd Golden Globes, Golden Globes, Hollywood Authentic, Los Angeles
Dwayne Johnson

The ceremony in the ballroom kicked off with host, Nikki Glaser, making cracks about contenders with awards being collected as guests nibbled on sushi designed by Nobu’s signature chef, Nobu Matsuhisa. Plates on the tables included a caviar cup, lobster salad with spicy lemon dressing, salmon nigiri, tuna nigiri, and miso black cod while sushi rolls were made to order at a hideaway sushi station.

Timothée Chalamet sat chatting at his table wearing custom Chrome Hearts and Cartier with his girlfriend Kylie Jenner (in custom gold Ashi Studio) and Givenchy-clad Jennifer Lawrence, while Leonardo DiCaprio held court at another (wearing Dior). Chalamet took home the gong for best actor in a musical or comedy for Marty Supreme (saying his previous nominations at the event made the win ‘that much sweeter’), while Wagner Moura won best lead actor in a drama for his role in The Secret Agent,  which also landed best film not in the English language.

83rd Golden Globes, Golden Globes, Hollywood Authentic, Los Angeles
Timothée Chalamet, Josh Safdie
83rd Golden Globes, Golden Globes, Hollywood Authentic, Los Angeles
Diane Lane, Wagner Moura, Colman Domingo
83rd Golden Globes, Golden Globes, Hollywood Authentic, Los Angeles
Paul Mescal, Jessie Buckley
83rd Golden Globes, Golden Globes, Hollywood Authentic, Los Angeles
Jessie Buckley

Best drama film went to Hamnet – with the award picked up by producer Steven Spielberg, while Ryan Coogler’s Sinners took best original score and box office achievement awards. Nominated for her supporting role in Sinners, Wunmi Mosaku revealed her pregnancy in a custom made canary yellow gown from Matthew Reisman. Rose Byrne was named best lead female actor in a comedy for Sundance hit  If I Had Legs I’d Kick You (and told the audience her husband Bobby Cannavale was at an exotic pet expo in New Jersey) as Stellan Skarsgård won male supporting actor for Sentimental Value. He implored audiences to support the theatrical experience of seeing films; ‘Hopefully you will see it in the cinema, because they are an extinguished species now. In a cinema, where the lights go down… That is magic. Cinema should be seen in cinemas.’

83rd Golden Globes, Golden Globes, Hollywood Authentic, Los Angeles
Rose Byrne
83rd Golden Globes, Golden Globes, Hollywood Authentic, Los Angeles
Stellan Skarsgård

Both Anderson and Jessie Buckley (in Dior) expressed their love for their vocation when they ascended the winners podium. ‘I love doing what I do. So this is just fun,’ Anderson said, while Buckley declared ‘I love what I do and I love being part of this industry’. She also expressed a love of the Polish soup Hamnet key grip Tomasz Sternicki made on set. 

83rd Golden Globes, Golden Globes, Hollywood Authentic, Los Angeles
Julia Roberts
83rd Golden Globes, Golden Globes, Hollywood Authentic, Los Angeles
Snoop Dogg, Fran Drescher

Julia Roberts earned a standing ovation when she presented an award wearing Giorgio Armani Prive and Macauley Culkin returned to the Globes stage for the first time in 35 years to hand out an award. ‘I do exist all year round!’ he joked. Backstage, Snoop Dogg hung out with Fran Drescher, the Hamnet team celebrated their win and Sean Penn caught up with Guillermo Del Toro.

83rd Golden Globes, Golden Globes, Hollywood Authentic, Los Angeles
Stephen Graham

The evening was also dominated by TV with Adolescence taking home best limited TV series, best actor for Stephen Graham, best supporting actress for Erin Doherty and best supporting actor for British teenager Owen Cooper who rocked Bottega Veneta and admitted he probably should have been revising for his exams. The gang headed to Spago’s post ceremony for the Netflix after-party attended by revellers including George and Amal Clooney…

83rd Golden Globes, Golden Globes, Hollywood Authentic, Los Angeles
Elle Fanning

AWARD WINNERS

Best Picture – Comedy Or Musical
One Battle After Another 

Best Picture – Drama
Hamnet 

Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama
Wagner Moura – The Secret Agent  

Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy
Timothée Chalamet – Marty Supreme 

Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama
Jessie Buckley – Hamnet 

Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy
Rose Byrne – If I Had Legs I’d Kick You 

Best Supporting Actress 
Teyana Taylor – One Battle After Another 

Best Supporting Actor
Stellan Skarsgård – Sentimental Value 

Best Original Song
“Golden” – KPop Demon Hunters 

Best Original Score – Motion Picture 
Ludwig Göransson – Sinners 

Best Director – Motion Picture
Paul Thomas Anderson – One Battle After 
Another 

Best Screenplay
Paul Thomas Anderson – One Battle After Another 

Best non-English Language Film 
The Secret Agent 

Best Animated Film 
KPop Demon Hunters  

Outstanding Cinematic and Box Office Achievement
Sinners


Photographs by GREG WILLIAMS
Words by JANE CROWTHER

January 9, 2026

Chloé Zhao, Jessie Buckley, Joe Alwyn, Paul Mescal, Zac Wishart

Words by JANE CROWTHER


It’s a matter of common knowledge that Shakespeare lost a son, Hamnet, and his subsequent grief informed the crafting of one of his one most celebrated plays delving into sorrow, parenthood and death; Hamlet. The theatrical, narrative and emotionally resonant feat that Chloe Zhao pulls off with Hamnet – blindsiding audiences with devastation despite this prior intel – is uncommon, remarkable.

Chloé Zhao, Jessie Buckley, Joe Alwyn, Paul Mescal, Zac Wishart
Focus Features/Universal Pictures

Adapted by Zhao and Maggie O’Farrell (whose bestseller it is based on), Hamnet charts the romance of the Bard (Paul Mescal) with Agnes (Jessie Buckley) through to their shattering as a family and the premiere performance of Hamlet. While Will is a man of ideas (scraping money together as a teacher while he pens his masterpieces by candlelight at night), Agnes is of the earth – an elemental woman who practices folk magic, wanders the woods in her muddy dress and snoozes in piles of leaves at the foot of mossy, towering oak trees. She burns as brightly as her scarlet gown, a force of nature that knocks Shakespeare off his feet, their hot and fast romance quickly begetting an imminent child and a marriage. Their children are brought up in an atmosphere of love and respect for the earth, closely bonded to each other. Shakespeare travels to London to ply his playwriting, bidding fond farewells to his brood as he commutes (a bittersweet parting moment at a street corner will be recognised by all parents), and the spectre of the plague takes hold.

Death sits alongside family life; is examined when a pet dies, is fought when illness descends. Death destroys and remakes, renders the Shakepeares strangers to each other and also, ultimately, connects them. In exploring the undertow of grief – in a feral howl, in despair, in process and in using it as a tool, Zhao and O’Farrell unpick the universal experience of losing a loved one while also celebrating the power and yes, necessity, of art to reflect, unite and heal.

Chloé Zhao, Jessie Buckley, Joe Alwyn, Paul Mescal, Zac Wishart
Focus Features/Universal Pictures

Key to that transference is the ability of Mescal and Buckley to fully inhabit their characters, convincing immediately of their connection, lust and love – and of their adoration of their onscreen children. Jacobi Jupe (brother of Noah) is astonishing as the boy at the centre of an experience that breaks them; cheeky, sweet, afraid, and vulnerable. The black hole to hell seen at the beginning of the film, the gaping mouth of a dank tunnel in the roots of a tree promises a dark journey of the heart, but even prepared for an emotional assault, what follows is heartbreaking.

Chloé Zhao, Jessie Buckley, Joe Alwyn, Paul Mescal, Zac Wishart
Focus Features/Universal Pictures

Buckley is understandably getting awards heat for her delicate sketching of a woman out of time; both too modern and too grounded in ancient spirituality for Elizabethan life, a ‘witch’ whose ferocious fight for her child is painful and beautiful to watch. Mescal meets her at every step though his role is necessarily more contained, while the Tudor home and village that the couple inhabited (Weobley in Hertfordshire standing in for Stratford) is brought to such visceral life that it seems we can smell the fire smoke and the poultices, taste the food Agnes puts on her heavy wooden table, feel the cool mud splatter in the street. Zhao’s eye for detail and beauty has never been better.

One critic has gone so far as to call Hamnet the ‘greatest film ever made’ and while that description might be up to interpretation of each viewer, what is undeniable is that this is a picture of great humanity, artistry and heart – heavy though it may be.


Pictures courtesy of Focus Features/Universal Pictures
Hamnet is in cinemas now

December 23, 2025

Ella Anderson, Fisher Stevens, Hugh Jackman, Jim Belushi, Kate Hudson, Michael Imperioli, Mustafa Shakir

Words by JANE CROWTHER


The warmth of the real-life story of the Neil Diamond tribute band, Lightning & Thunder (aka Mike and Claire Sardina), gets a jukebox sorta-musical treatment in this sentimental fable of second chances, perseverance and hope. After the challenging year we’ve had with 2025, ringing in ’26 with a bit of ‘Sweet Caroline’ and human kindness might be just the ticket.

Ella Anderson, Fisher Stevens, Hugh Jackman, Jim Belushi, Kate Hudson, Michael Imperioli, Mustafa Shakir
Focus Features/Universal Pictures

For those who didn’t catch the 2008 documentary of the same name, the Sardinas found each other on the Milwaukee tribute circuit, two people who had already been through the ringer but who lived in optimism and joy. We first meet single dad Mike (Hugh Jackman in an alarming wig) as he strums his Neil Diamond anthem at an AA meeting, perennially grateful to have survived the military and alcoholism but still looking for a happily ever after. Mike steps on stage as ‘Lightning’, not exactly a Diamond impersonator, more of a channeller of the songwriter’s music. That’s not a niche that’s working out for him until he meets single mom, Claire (Kate Hudson in an alarming mullet) who does a mean Patsy Cline impression. Sparks fly, music is played and the duo blend their talents, families and possessions as a unique double-act, both on and off stage. 

This should be the second act both players have been hoping for – complete with benediction from Pearl Jam (yes, really) and sell-out shows – but disaster strikes. How unconditional love, resolve and Diamond’s choice back catalogue sustain a family through dark times is how Song Sung Blue earns its emotional resonance. Jackman can of course sing and emote to tear-inducing levels, but twinned with Hudson’s bubbly persona and a bleak narrative arc, he’s perhaps the best he’s ever been in this genre. He embodies optimism, even when it’s hard to find, and his lusty renditions of ‘Forever in Blue Jeans’, ‘Crunchy Granola Suite’ and Diamond’s bonkers ‘Soolaimon’ are a cinematic euphoria shot. Hudson meets him musically and emotionally, delivering a weepie solo of ‘I’ve Been This Way Before’ in a button-pushing moment that is played tonally – like the rest of the movie – with such sweet sincerity that cynicism struggles to have a place. 

Ella Anderson, Fisher Stevens, Hugh Jackman, Jim Belushi, Kate Hudson, Michael Imperioli, Mustafa Shakir
Focus Features/Universal Pictures

If that sounds cheesy it’s because it is. Song Sung Blue (written and directed by Craig Brewer) unapologetically embraces dreamers, rhinestones and yes, the healing power of a banger tune; offering a chorus line of nice, earnest people just struggling to get by. There’s no worldwide fame or cash windfall at stake here; this is a film about the elation of being your true authentic self, of finding your tribe, of getting up when you’re knocked down. It’s a portrait of a small but good life, and the love that sustained it. Sweet, feel-good and positive, it also reminds audiences of how many Diamond songs are on the cultural hard drive. You’ll be adding to your karaoke list post-watch…


Pictures courtesy of Focus Features/Universal Pictures
Song Sung Blue is in cinemas now

December 22, 2025

Timothée Chalamet, Gwyneth Paltrow, Odessa A’zion, Tyler The Creator, Abel Ferrara, Josh Safdie

Words by JANE CROWTHER


Timothée Chalamet has already been testing the tensile nature of likeability with his recent promo stunts for this frantic, nervy sorta-triumph of the underdog story from Josh Safdie. With his viral marketing strategy (blimp, orange, ‘schwep!’) and unapologetic declarations about striving for greatness, Chalamet has been prepping audiences for his turn as fifties New York grifter Marty Mauser, a bombastic motormouth who wants to change his humdrum life as a shoe clerk for fame on the international stage as a table tennis champion. Marty will do anything (and anyone) to get that dream; his childhood married sweetheart (Odessa A’zion) or the movie star wife of a prospective sponsor (Gwyneth Paltrow), leading his bestie (Tyler, The Creator) into danger or pissing off a mobster (Abel Ferrara) with a beloved dog. His exploits leave him running as fast as his mouth, always one dollar away from triumph or disaster.

Timothée Chalamet, Gwyneth Paltrow, Odessa A’zion, Tyler The Creator, Abel Ferrara, Josh Safdie
A24/Central Pictures

Written by Safdie and Ronald Bronstein and loosely inspired by real-life table tennis star Marty Reisman, Marty Supreme is a tale of America, of ambition, of audacity, of balls – orange ping pongs and the cajones required to con. As Marty races through Manhattan streets, to London (where he represents the USA on a shoestring), to dangerous New Jersey hinterlands and onward to Japan for an all-on-the-line bout, the film unpacks the psyche of a winner… who actually doesn’t win anything. Marty is a mythomanic whose tenacity and self-belief moulds reality, his want naked and feral. Modern parallels can be drawn between American foreign policy, the prostrating of contestants on talent shows telling judges they’ll ‘give it 110 percent’, the performative nature of social media existence. 

Timothée Chalamet, Gwyneth Paltrow, Odessa A’zion, Tyler The Creator, Abel Ferrara, Josh Safdie
A24/Central Pictures

Marty isn’t ethical or good, but he’s multi-dimensional and magnetic – whether he’s falling through a ceiling in a bath or acing a ping pong into a fruit bowl. There’s something to admire in his endless drive for success despite the odds being stacked against him. Much of that charm is down to Chalamet’s ballsy and unapologetic performance, rattling through the picture like a live wire, his activities soundtracked by anachronistic needle drops. The more Marty fails, the harder he tries, the more sure of his eminence he becomes. The verve and swagger of the kid is hypnotic, impressive. 

Timothée Chalamet, Gwyneth Paltrow, Odessa A’zion, Tyler The Creator, Abel Ferrara, Josh Safdie
A24/Central Pictures

Directed with kinetic energy by Safdie, watching Marty Supreme is like playing one of the matches so entertainingly essayed in the film. When the lights go up, the feeling is one of exhaustion and relief. And of certainty; that this is Chalamet’s best work of his career, that he is pursuing greatness as fervently as Marty. It is award-winning stuff and worthy of a big orange blimp. Schwep!

Timothée Chalamet, Gwyneth Paltrow, Odessa A’zion, Tyler The Creator, Abel Ferrara, Josh Safdie
A24/Central Pictures

Pictures courtesy of A24/Central Pictures
Marty Supreme is in cinemas now

December 19, 2025

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

Kate Winslet takes Greg Williams down memory lane.

Parenthood has been very much on my mind while creating our eleventh print issue of Hollywood Authentic. Not only because my wife Daisy and I just welcomed the latest edition to our family – a baby boy, Gene – but because of the importance of parents in providing an environment for talent and artistry to thrive. 

In shooting Kate Winslet as we returned to her hometown of Reading in the UK, it became increasingly apparent as we talked about her work and drive that her ability to find creative inspiration came from her mum and dad giving her the space and love to find it. 

Helen Mirren, Timothy Spall, Kate Winslet, Andrea Riseborough, Toni Collette, Goodbye June
Kate Winslet photographed by Greg Williams

Although she’s always been vocal and transparent about her humble background, it might surprise people who assume she was born with privilege to see her revisit where she spent her formative years, and reflect on how little she had growing up as a child. While she may not have been afforded fancy classes or posh days out, she was rich in love, security and encouragement. Her parents, despite their limited means, instilled in her a passion for theatre and performance that took her away from Reading and all the way to the Oscars stage. It was humbling and inspiring for me to see her re-live her days treading the boards at the Hexagon Theatre in Reading, recalling saving pennies on her bus fare and returning to her much-changed childhood home. And, as a parent herself, she is passing that inspiration onto her own children – having just directed her first film that is written by her son, Joe Anders. 

Laura Dern tells a similar story when she looks back on growing up in Hollywood with two indie actor parents who had to leave her to go away and work, but showed her abundance in terms of integrity and inspiration. She can trace a path directly from her own diverse, explorative career to the artists her parents were during her childhood. It reminds me how important it is to inspire our children. As my artist parents did for my brother Olly, a painter and poet, and I. 

And for that matter, how important it is that a magazine like Hollywood Authentic exists.

Unlike other magazines, we do not focus on fashion stories; we trade in artistic inspiration – whether that’s Lily James learning to give herself space away from her roles in order to arrive at projects refreshed, or writer/director Clint Bentley understanding that the movies he watched with his parents as a kid are the ones that inform his own art now. Also in this issue, award-winning costume designer Paul Tazewell unpicks the value of having an artistic family in building his career, while Adeel Akhtar recognises that his work is fuelled by the smell of home and the silliness of his children. 

I hope that in taking inspiration from artists and finding the stories behind their creativity that Hollywood Authentic inspires others, providing a space for new artists to grow. 

BUY ISSUE 11 HERE

greg williams signature

GREG WILLIAMS
Founder, Hollywood Authentic

hollywood authentic, greg williams, hollywood authentic magazine

10. THE PERFECT NEIGHBOR

A Netflix true-crime hit on the platform that is also an awards darling, Geeta Gandbhir’s timely body-cam account of a minor disagreement between neighbors in Florida which takes a lethal turn deftly prompts conversations of race, gun law and American society. Horribly fascinating.

9. 28 YEARS LATER

Danny Boyle’s return to his ‘infected’ franchise delivers teeth-gritting tension, social commentary and the same verve as his 23 year-old original. Continuing to push the boundaries of tech (filming on iphones), Boyle’s fable is a strangely beautiful poem to death which takes on new emotional resonance post Covid.

8. BRING HER BACK

Following up their sensational horror debut Talk To Me with an escalation in discomfort, sibling writer/directors Danny and Michael Philippou prove their flair is no fluke with a story of the monstrosity of motherhood. Disquieting and haunting in every way, with kitchen utensils used in unforgettable ways.

7. A REAL PAIN

An awards winner last season but only coming out in UK cinemas in January, Jesse Eisenberg’s self-penned tale of two cousins travelling to their grandmother’s Polish homeland and reckoning with their Jewish heritage lives long in the memory. That’s thanks to a finely-calibrated dramedy script and a pitch perfect performance that is both infuriating and endearing by Keiran Culkin.

6. IT WAS JUST AN ACCIDENT

Jafar Panahi’s electric, salient film festival hit is understandably on awards shortlists now. Following a group of former prisoners who think they recognise their sadistic jailer, Panahi explores the cruelty of man, trauma, revenge, forgiveness and the difficult road to Iranian democracy.

5. MARTY SUPREME

Timothée Chalamet’s bombastic bid for Oscar is housed in this energetic, nervy anti-sports movie from Josh Safdie which follows the mythomania of a table tennis player and might as well be about America’s unapologetic self-identification in the world. Electrifying cinema.

4. BUGONIA

Yorgos Lanthimos reunites with Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons for a more accessible satire than their Kinds Of Kindness – and it pays off. Taking in themes of misogyny, environmentalism and radicalisation while still playing exploding head for grisly laughs, it’s entertaining while also being sly, smart and ultimately, unbearably sad.

3. TRAIN DREAMS

Adapted from Denis Johnson’s novella, this ode to the vanished life of an early 20th century logger in the Pacific Northwest is more profound than its, ahem, logline. Astonishingly beautiful visuals, sound and a melodious narration make it akin to meditation. Stunning.

2. SINNERS

Innovative, spiritual, thrilling, box office-defying… Ryan Coogler’s vampire period movie delves into grief, Jim Crow laws, artistic ownership and the generational power of grassroots music. All that and dripping in blood and sex. Cinema at its vital finest.

1. ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER

Paul Thomas Anderson’s exemplary stoner comedy loosely based on Thomas Pynchon’s Vineland addresses immigration, white supremacy, racism and corruption by making them a lot of fun and a lot of a mess. An embarrassment of riches in performances from an all-star cast but the absolute comet blazing through it all is Teyana Taylor; magnificently, unapologetically fierce, with two lone eyelash extensions and a semi-automatic, she is one of cinema’s great female creations.

Words by Jane Crowther

December 19, 2025

Sydney Sweeney, Amanda Seyfried, Brandon Sklenar, Paul Feig

Words by JANE CROWTHER


Who wears a push up bra to bed? If you wore exclusively white, wouldn’t there be a lot of laundry? Does liking Barry Lyndon make you a monster? Questions you will ask while watching Paul Feig’s knowing, horny, beach read of a movie that zips along breathlessly but leaves gaping holes in logic if you really think about it. That is not to say it’s bad – this is the sort of bonkbuster thrill-ride you’d consume on a sun lounger and feel satiated without ever declaring it a work of art.

Sydney Sweeney, Amanda Seyfried, Brandon Sklenar, Paul Feig
Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate

The set-up: Ex-con Millie (Sydney Sweeney) needs a job and interviews as a housekeeper for the picture-perfect, wealthy Winchesters; cream cashmere-clad wife, Nina (Amanda Seyfried) and hunky hubby Andrew (Brandon Sklenar). Miraculously, Millie gets the gig – which fulfils her parole conditions and provides a home. But within days Nina has turned from calm delight to feral psycho, while Andrew simmers with disapproval, regret and a propensity to lurk around the house in a white vest that shows off his guns. So far, so Jane Eyre

Sydney Sweeney, Amanda Seyfried, Brandon Sklenar, Paul Feig
Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate

What is really going on in the Winchesters’ dynamic? Who is a reliable narrator? Why does the window not open in the housemaid’s room? How does Millie have this many Abercrombie & Fitch saucy-student outfits in her bag of meagre possessions? Why does the gardener look like a dancer from a Magic Mike show? As Nina turns to shrieking hysteria, Millie and Andrew start flirting over Junior Mints in the den and things flip to ‘thriller’ in ways that are easily pre-plotted by aficionados of the genre.

Sydney Sweeney, Amanda Seyfried, Brandon Sklenar, Paul Feig
Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate

But sometimes, that’s exactly what you want. With dialogue that is knowingly camp, sex scenes that tap into Mills & Boon tropes and a performance by Seyfried that feels designed to let you in on the secret while Sweeney flaunts, The Housemaid is a wilfully trashy ride that should be enjoyed with a beverage and a side of self-awareness. The only trigger warning is to not watch if you like china sets or dentistry.

Sydney Sweeney, Amanda Seyfried, Brandon Sklenar, Paul Feig
Daniel McFadden/Lionsgate

Pictures courtesy of Lionsgate
The Housemaid is in cinemas now

December 15, 2025

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

Photographs & interview by GREG WILLIAMS
As told to JANE CROWTHER


As she prepares to release her directorial debut, Goodbye June, Kate Winslet returns to her creative and family roots in Reading with Greg Williams and takes a trip down memory lane.

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

Kate Winslet is studying the information board of the number 17 bus in Reading town centre on an autumnal October morning. She smiles and turns to me. ‘It says here: “Your bus fare could take you anywhere.” That’s actually incredibly moving, because it was things like bus fares and saving for train fares that did take me to London for auditions. It took me to the delicatessen to earn the money to pay for the train fares to go to auditions, where I would then start getting jobs in London. I was always getting on one stop later, and off one stop earlier, to just save a bit off the bus fare. I would get the train from Reading to London a lot. I’d run around with my little A to Z, running from audition to audition. You just hoped you’re going to get a gig…’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

Kate has been getting the gig for some years now. The Oscar-winning actor hasn’t stopped working since landing her calling-card role as Juliet in Peter Jackson’s Heavenly Creatures as a 17-year-old, which took her away from her hometown in the South of England to New Zealand – and beyond. Having played a diverse range of roles during a glittering career, Kate is now challenging herself in a different way: as director. As she turns a milestone birthday, she’s putting the finishing touches to her directorial debut, Goodbye June, a heartfelt family comi-drama following spatting siblings as they come together to look after their ailing mother at Christmas time. Before we travelled to Reading for a trip down memory lane, I watched Kate finesse the sound mix of her film at Abbey Road Studios a few days earlier, where she has previously worked in a producer capacity on Lee and The Regime. Today we’ve arrived in the Berkshire town for the actor/director to revisit her childhood haunts and home, to process the progress she’s made from being a little girl from humble beginnings who wanted to perform. 

While we stand at the bus stop, the purple number 17 appears as if on cue. ‘It cost about 30p to get home and it stopped a little bit before our house…’ As we linger in town, she recalls getting her ears pierced in a local jewellers and reminisces about Butts shopping centre and the treats she coveted from there. ‘They had a big sweet shop in there called Confetti. We weren’t really allowed sweets, mainly because they were expensive. But I do remember on our birthdays, my mum would always include a big bag of pick ‘n’ mix from Confetti.’ The Winslets lived in Reading as an artistic family; dad Roger was a part-time actor who worked a variety of jobs between roles, mum Sally was a part-time nanny. Kate grew up one of four siblings with an older sister, Anna, a younger sister, Beth, and a younger brother, Joss. The children were part of an amateur dramatic company who regularly performed at the town’s Hexagon Theatre, a Brutalist behemoth on the ring road. While there, Kate auditioned for TV and film roles and, as a teen, started to save money from the paying gigs she landed. ‘I used to do a lot of children’s voiceovers for foreign films because I had a very good ear for accents. So I would do Danish films into American, and things like that. I could just start saving, you know, for a life.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

I was always getting on one stop later, and off one stop earlier, to just save a bit off the bus fare. I would get the train from Reading to London a lot. I’d run around with my little A to Z, running from audition to audition

Her life now is all over the world as she travels for work. But as a teenager, Reading was her domain. ‘I lived here until I was 17 years old, and I got my first movie. The Hexagon Theatre is the first place I ever went on stage, when I was 11 years old, in a production of Bugsy Malone.’ As we drive over to the Hexagon to relive those days, Kate opens up about her family. ‘You know, people often don’t believe this about me… I speak very well, so it sounds like I would have been very well-educated, well-bred, from privilege, etcetera. And that’s not the case at all. My parents had very, very, very little. The one thing that they did do for us, because it was free, was that they enrolled us in a fantastic theatre company [Starmaker] that was based here in Reading, which was so incredible and phenomenally diverse and inclusive, and took kids from about the age of eight right through to adults. It was our first proper introduction to what it means to be part of a functioning creative community, when you put on a show, and create a piece of art in any way that involves multiple people.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

We arrive at the theatre and I ask what being part of a creative community felt like to that little girl. ‘You all had to listen and muck in – and also concentrate. We had a lot of dance routines and tons of dialogue we had to learn, and you all had to look out for each other, and take it in turns to get the parts. I never actually did get very massive parts with that theatre company, but it didn’t matter, because they made everyone feel equally as important. It was one of the best things I think our parents did for us, because it meant that our life didn’t revolve around school, and the minutiae of school playground politics. I didn’t particularly like school and I don’t think I really thrived there. But it was here that I really did thrive. My mum and dad probably did feel terrible guilt that they couldn’t pay for things like piano lessons or a proper dance school or acting school – but what they could do was give us these experiences of community, and being part of something that meant that our self-esteem as people was always pretty well-rounded, you know?’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime
Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

She pauses. ‘It’s so much harder for kids now with social media and people constantly comparing themselves to one another, and wanting to be liked, and falling apart if they’re disliked. It’s so insane. It’s an invented form of how one’s natural self-esteem should grow, when in actual fact it’s just being part of life and communicating with others that often gives you the best measure of who you’re becoming within the world, and your place in the world, and figuring out who you want to be. We were just so lucky that we had that. Thank God mobile phones didn’t exist.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

When we arrive at the theatre we find the places she remembers: the stairwell where the bigger kids stole crafty smoking breaks or ‘snogs’, the massive red theatre sign out front and the front-of-house lobby inside (‘It smells the same!’ she marvels). As we walk inside to explore, I ask if she feels that she draws from those formative experiences when working now? ‘To me, I was learning how to act here. I was learning how to do all of it – the acting and the dancing and the singing, which is quite significant, because you learn to understand your body as something that you have to take care of. And also you learn its limits. There’s things that you learn, and that also involves an enormous amount of trust. So the way in which I think I learned to listen and respect a space that had other people in it – that really did begin here. And actually directing now – I was acutely aware of my own capacity to pull everyone in. I’ve always done that as an actor. But as a director, it’s completely 100% the job to do that, to pull everyone in. And because the film that I made is about a family, I wanted the on-set experience to feel as close to that as possible, so that everyone was just doing it by osmosis.’ 

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

You know, people often don’t believe this about me… I speak very well, so it sounds like I would have been very well-educated, well-bred, from privilege, etcetera. And that’s not the case at all. My parents had very, very, very little. The one thing that they did do for us, because it was free, was that they enrolled us in a fantastic theatre company

Written by Kate’s son, Joe Anders, the film follows June (played by Helen Mirren), the matriarch of her family; mother to four disparate grown kids (Winslet, Andrea Riseborough, Toni Collette and Johnny Flynn), grandmother to a number of kids and wife to Timothy Spall’s befuddled pensioner. Battling terminal cancer in hospital, June approaches Christmas as her health declines, hoping to see her argumentative offspring united and to depart on her own terms. Kate worked as director to create a company feeling among the cast, something she can trace back to the years she spent here. ‘Being part of experiences I had here for a formative time of my life – it definitely set me up in terms of reaching for community, time and time again.’ 

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

We find the stage door and the memories come flooding back. ‘On the first night, my mum and dad would always find a way to send flowers. That was just incredible – to be a child, and to be sent flowers by your parents. I remember seeing my mum’s little handwriting on the card. I was never the star. I never got the main part. It never occurred to me, because that wasn’t why I was doing it. I never sought out fame. I wasn’t setting myself up mentally ever for fulfilling a big dream of becoming a famous actress. I just thought, “Well, if I’m lucky, I might get the odd episode of Casualty, and a bit of theatre, and voiceover work.” And I thought, “Well, that would be incredible if I could make a living that way.” I didn’t anticipate any of this to have happened to me.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

Though she started out as an amateur performer at the Hexagon, Kate soon transferred that experience to drama school and beginning to get paid work. ‘I got a part bursary, and my grandmother contributed something for the first year,’ she says of affording a fee-paying school. ‘Then I started to get this voiceover work and that went towards the fees. I was able to gradually actually pay for those school fees myself.’ We head backstage where Kate recalls the way to stage left and right, the sound of tap shoes clattering along the corridors. She remembers the dressing rooms, the excitement, the noise, the nerves… ‘It was nervous excitement. It wasn’t a proper, real stage fright. I’ve successfully avoided putting myself in a position where I would feel stage fright, because somehow as a grown-up I haven’t done any theatre. The last play I did was when I was 18 years old, and I did a production of What the Butler Saw at The Royal Exchange in Manchester. And it was amazing. But I was terrified.’ 

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

To me, I was learning how to act here. I was learning how to do all of it – the acting and the dancing and the singing, which is quite significant, because you learn to understand your body as something that you have to take care of

It seems strange to hear an actor who has achieved so much on film and in TV admit to such a thing. She laughs. ‘As an actor, most of the prep time is really spent just shitting yourself, procrastinating… If I’m getting ready for a film, I’ll wake up at half-three in the morning, and think, “Oh, well, I’m awake now. I might as well get up and panic a bit more.” I’m then pacing the floor, learning lines in the dark, or figuring out character stuff. And that experience of preparation for a film can often be a little bit destructive because there is so much panic that goes on. And then when you start, it’s all fine. You’re in it. And with Goodbye June, I didn’t have time to think about nerves. And we had a good rehearsal period that was very concentrated because I know what a nightmare it is as an actor to be on a roll in rehearsal, and suddenly be pulled away for dialect coaching, or for fight practice…’

Her directorial debut seems to have been a way to put right some of the pet peeves she might have had in front of the camera. ‘I was able to do a lot of things that I’d had on my private wish list,’ she nods. ‘As an actress I’d thought to myself, “One day, if I ever direct, I really would love to not have booms on poles. I would really love to have locked-off cameras, and the crew just walk away, so the actors can just be in that space together.” And I was able to do that on Goodbye June. It was also really important that we created a really respectful, calm, mindful, inclusive on-set environment. We had a child actor on set with special needs and a child who was neurodivergent, so it mattered that everyone felt safe and supported – because it’s not something that often gets given as much consideration. I did feel that having experienced really beneficial working environments – and some less beneficial ones – during a 33-year career, I was able to implement my own dream environment as an actor and provide it for the other actors.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

With its messy family dynamics and dialogue, audiences will no doubt recognise many aspects of family life in Kate’s film. ‘I think some of our most complicated relationships in life are with the people that we love the most of all in the whole wide world. And to be able to create that, I knew that I would have to provide an environment in which everybody felt not just safe and heard – but sometimes held, because every one of our cast members had experienced loss in some way, either of a parent or of a very close family member or past love. Sharing those stories was hard for them. But when you do something like Goodbye June, which is about family and loss in equal measure, you know as an actor that you are going to have to talk about the hard stuff that you try to leave behind. This was a space that all of that had to be included.’ 

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

Inspired by Mike Leigh and Ken Loach, Kate worked closely with her cinematographer, Alwin Küchler, to capture the mechanics of a family as they rowed and reconciled. She relished the edit, the sound mix, the whole creative process. ‘I loved it all. I absolutely want to do more. You know, I’ve worked with some incredible directors and I’ve also worked with some directors who were maybe less comfortable working with actors, more visual directors. And so there are certainly things that I have learned myself were absolutely areas to avoid with actors. Sometimes I’ve hung on to things I know I wouldn’t say to an actor, because those things were just either unnerving to me or simply not helpful. But I had huge support from Francis Lee who reminded me to trust myself. Todd Field and Todd Haynes were also brilliantly supportive and encouraging, and Jocelyn Moorhouse, who pointed out certain things that she felt I could lean into within my own integrity as a creative.’

Part of helming a project was setting the tone for the 35-day shoot – one that she admits crew members were uncharacteristically reluctant to leave by the end of a filming experience she describes as ‘warm’. ‘How I am in my life is a big smile on your face and lots of good, positive energy. And I’ve always been like that as an actor because when you’re number one on the call sheet, that comes with a responsibility, your energy is 100% setting the tone. So if you’ve had an argument with somebody at home or a colleague has upset you or something’s not gone according to plan, you have to leave that at the door. You can change the course of the entire day and often you can make things fantastic if you just decide that you’re going to put that energy into it. And so as the director, I was doing that tenfold. I definitely learnt that as a director, you just wear the stress on the inside!’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime
Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

We make our way out to the stage, where Kate is astonished anew at the size of the venue, the number of seats looking back at her. ‘When you’re a little kid, this is huge!’ As she stands looking out to the stalls I wonder if she’d like to do theatre now. ‘I’ve several times come very, very close, and then timing hasn’t worked. And I think part of the reason why I still haven’t really done theatre is because I had a child when I was really young. I had Mia [Threapleton] when I was 25. Theatre is actually quite impractical when you’re a parent, because it’s evenings and all of your weekend. Whereas at least with filming hours, even though the hours are much longer, you’re not really working on the weekends, and usually you can get back in time to put the kids to bed. So that makes a big difference.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

As she turns back to the stage she remembers her tap choreography from one of her childhood shows, muscle memory kicking in. She tap dances with a grin on her face… When we leave the stage, we find a souvenir programme from a production of Annie that Kate starred in as Miss Hannigan. She turns the pages reverentially, finding a photo of herself at 15. ‘In the production of Annie that my sister Anna was in five years previously, in that production was a young Christian Bale who was also in this theatre company. He was an extraordinary tap dancer, he danced on the top of a stack of rotating suitcases.’ She relates a story of a castmate who talked of disliking her body because of how it was perceived by the boys in the company. She shakes her head. In her career she’s been subject to media dissection of her own body. ‘Sometimes I think so much has changed, and sometimes I think absolutely nothing has changed at all. It’s a constant thing, isn’t it?’ 

Real life vs dramatic life is something I want to ask her about. Her family make-up is similar to the one at the centre of Goodbye June. She’s one of four, and like Spall’s disabled dad, Kate’s father suffered a terrible accident when his foot was severed at the ankle by a boat rope. ‘His foot was put back on in a massive 18-hour operation during which he nearly died twice. So we grew up with our whole universe quite altered from that time, because life was already quite challenging in terms of financial resources and just trying to get by. And then things got a whole lot harder when Dad became disabled.’ There’s also a family link in that the screenplay is written by her son, Joe. ‘Joe got a place in screenwriting school after he finished his A levels. When he left school, he really struggled just to declare the fact that he did think he would like to go into the film industry. I did feel that very strongly, and I think there was a part of him that was almost resisting it being true. Perhaps like me, he would never want to do anything unless he felt he could really do it, or make a meaningful contribution to anything. So he got a place at screenwriting school, and he was encouraged by a fantastic writing tutor: “Write what you know, Joe.” The most significant thing that had happened in his life was the loss of his grandmother, my mum, and when she died, he was 13-and-a-half. We really all came together as a family, and gave her this passing that not only she deserved but would have wanted. He was struck by how for so few people that is ever the case, whether it’s just sheer geographics; whether it’s that death can creep up and take you by surprise; or for other more complicated family reasons. So he created a story that was predominantly about a family coming together as they were adjusting to the impending loss of the matriarch. The framework is very similar to my own family: sisters, a brother, a mum and dad who have been married forever. My parents were married forever until my mum passed away. And that was the backdrop.’

Kate was originally going to produce the film, and play the character of organising daughter, Julia (because she wanted to play the sister who was least like herself) but as she discussed who should direct she felt she couldn’t give the feature away to anyone else. That was when she realised she wanted to direct. ‘As an actor, it matters to me to tell stories that not just hopefully resonate with people, but that do make them feel that their stories do have a place to be told. I hope that if I do go on, and continue to be a director  that I continue in that vein of making sure that people are given a platform to have a voice, and getting those stories told. Because, so often, that doesn’t necessarily happen.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

When you do something like Goodbye June, which is about family and loss in equal measure, you know as an actor that you are going to have to talk about the hard stuff that you try to leave behind. This was a space that all of that had to be included

We decide to head out to the deli where Kate worked as a teenager, and jump in the car for the short journey. ‘It was where I was working when I received the phone call to tell me I had been cast in Heavenly Creatures, and that was the film that really did start my whole career. It’s crazy – 33 years ago,’ she tells me as she drives. After she filmed the movie she went straight back to work, just as her dad always did. ‘Well, yeah, because that’s what the life of an actor is. That’s also what I’d grown up seeing. Even though there were lots of actors in my family, they were completely impoverished. It’s actually typically very hard to make a living – still, today – as an actor. You always have to have a fallback plan. So I just went straight back to work, thinking, “Well, I’ll do this, then, until the next audition comes in…”’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

The next auditions came; she worked on Sense and Sensibility and Jude (‘So at that point, I was then able to make a living from acting’) and then Titanic came along. She stands outside the former deli, now a Vietnamese pho restaurant, and thinks about her past when a local woman called Maureen approaches to ask what we are doing. When she asks Kate what she does as a job, Kate replies, ‘I do films.’ She chats to Maureen and some other wellwishers that ask for photos and talks about her roles. They are delighted when she poses for pictures and tells them how pleased she is to meet them. When we leave to drive on to her old family home, Kate tells me how much she appreciates such interactions. ‘In the early parts of my career, the mainstream media in this country was really, really not very pleasant about me. So I learned quite a long time ago how to not care what people think. But it’s very different to caring about what people feel. And I do care about what people feel. How I make people feel is very important.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

I learned quite a long time ago how to not care what people think. But it’s very different to caring about what people feel. And I do care about what people feel. How I make people feel is very important

Learning is also important to her. ‘I’ve always said this: you can never stop learning as an actor. If you decide you know everything, you are fucked, because it means that you’ll stop listening, and you won’t pay attention – not just to what other actors say, but what they might bring into a room that could genuinely have an impact on the performance you’re about to give that you may have thought was going to come out of you in a certain way. Going into directing, I genuinely did feel solid in terms of what to do with a group of actors, and how to put a story together. But of course there were going to be things that I had never done before, you know? The wealth of information and knowledge that I was able to gain from working with these brilliant people [on Goodbye June] – it was just incredible. I never want to not do it. It’s the most intense, consistent period of absolutely working with no break. I started work on the film on the 3rd of January, and I’ve only just started to draw breath now in October. In theory, I should be exhausted, but I’m not at all. I feel completely empowered and uplifted by the work, because I was just so challenged by it, and felt really enriched by the whole experience, moment to moment.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

As we approach her childhood home on Oxford Road and park up, she tells me that she ensured that experience was paid forward. ‘I had a lot of first-time people on this film. If I was a first-time director and my son was a first-time writer… so I was able to give an opportunity to a first-time composer, a first-time set designer, a first-time costume-designer. These were just wonderful things to be able to do for people.’ I wonder if it’s different putting a project out into the world as a director, rather than an actor. ‘I am nervous about this, actually,’ she admits. ‘But one thing that I have strategically done throughout my career to help me stay grounded and level headed is I don’t read reviews ever. Even if it’s a good one I still won’t read it, because that will stay with me and that doesn’t really help. Of course, we hope that people will watch it, take something from it, be moved by it and hopefully even uplifted by it, because that is what we intend. But I think if I am to try to answer your question, I think it is going to be a bit harder for me to avoid what people think of the film.’

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

We stand outside the small terraced house where Kate grew up. The house is much run down since Kate lived there as a child, with newspaper instead of curtains and a boarded-up door. It’s not clear if the house is inhabited. ‘I’m fascinated by how similar it is here, but I do feel sad about the house, it’s a shame that it doesn’t look like a home anymore. When we lived here, we were never sad. We were really happy, had a really lovely life. We used to swing on this gate, I remember the sound of the letterbox…’ A passing pedestrian calls out ‘Are you famous?’ and Kate smiles. ‘Well, I could be,’ she laughs. The woman can’t place her til they discuss The Holiday. When she walks away with a selfie, Kate shrugs. ‘See, this happens. She knows I’m famous, but she doesn’t know who I am. But that’s how I’ve survived!’ She tells me she still uses public transport and for the most part moves around without being bothered.

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime
Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

We scoot around the back of the terrace of houses to the alleyway that runs along behind them. ‘I haven’t been down this alleyway since I was 15 years old,’ Kate exclaims and remembers riding her bike down the narrow path. ‘You’d grate your knuckles down the sides.’ We peer into gardens looking for her dad’s shed and her mum’s blackcurrant bush. She yelps when she finds it, and the remnants of her mum’s gardening and paving. ‘We felt really lucky with what we had. We had a home, this nice garden, and we had our rabbit, and our grandmother didn’t live too far away… We were very cramped, and the walls were paper thin, but we were really happy. And not many kids can say that. I do think what my upbringing really did give to me is a sense of perspective on what’s important. And I’ve never, ever, ever lost that perspective. You know, family, gratitude, a shared meal, a shared experience, that sense of community and team spirit. We grew up just getting on with it and making the best of everything. And I still have that same attitude now in an industry in which people can slightly lose their way or lose a sense of priority, and also believe all the “yes” people around them. I’m deeply distrustful of people who say “yes” to me all the time! So, yeah, it’s taught me to be very good at seeing right through all the bullshit!’ She pauses for a moment and looks emotional as she peers over the back fence.

Goodbye June, Heavenly Creatures, Lee, Sense and Sensibility, The Regime

We leave the house and garden behind and as we return to the car I ask how she feels now about returning home to where it all started for her. ‘Reading served me well. But I will say this: I always knew I was just not meant for here. I was meant to be going off, and finding my way somewhere else. I felt that very strongly.’ We pass the number 17 bus stop on the road and she grins. Her bus fare really did take her everywhere… 


Photographs and interview by GREG WILLIAMS
As told to JANE CROWTHER
Goodbye June is out in cinemas now and released on Netflix, 24 December 

Styling: Cheryl Konteh c/o A-Frame
Hair: Nicola Clarke
Make-up: Lisa Eldridge, c/o Streeters
Thanks to The Hexagon Theatre, Reading
www.whatsonreading.com

Beige striped jacket: Max Mara
White vest: American Vintage
Grey trench coat: Frankie Shop
Black cashmere knit: Theory
Jeans: Ralph Lauren
Loafers: Church’s
Black blazer: Saint Laurent
Black cashmere knit: Theory
Jeans: Ralph Lauren
Loafers: Church’s
Black shirt: Equipment
Grey jeans: FrameTrench coat: Burberry
Sweater: The Frankie Shop

hollywood authentic, greg williams, hollywood authentic magazine