![]() “I can be in a bad mood before a show and then come offstage and I’m completely rejuvenated.” “I was really just falling apart not being able to do shows because they are the thing that makes me feel like the best that I am,” she says. Now that she can perform again, she understands why. “That girl was going through an identity crisis, oh, my gosh,” she says. Looking back on the 2020 interview, where she was struggling with the pandemic’s effects on the music industry, she had some sympathy for her former self. “I’m starting to have an adulthood which is new for me, and very exciting, and I have had new experiences and new people and lots of love.” It has also meant convincing a fashion house to stop using fur, getting two more tattoos, and finally figuring out how to handle being recognized in public. It’s all I’ve ever said.”įor Eilish, the last year’s changes are more than skin-deep. “Literally the thing that I’ve been preaching about since I first started is to wear what you want. Period.”-but she pointed out that the underlying motivations aren’t too far from her old look. ![]() “It’s not a new style, it’s one thing I wore,” she tells V.F., “and then I’m going to wear this another day.” Her new motto is “Anything goes. ![]() She debuted the new look on a British Vogue cover that showed her dressed as an Old Hollywood pinup, but assured everyone that she hasn’t lost her capacity for taking risks. Earlier this year, the 19-year-old pop star swapped out her signature multihued neon hairstyles for a stark platinum blonde. When she arrived on set on October 18, 2021, one transformation was obvious. Ever since 2017, Billie Eilish has taken one day each year to sit down with Vanity Fair for a Time Capsule interview, where she talks about her career, her personality, and the changes she has seen over the previous 12 months.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |