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Category: Interviews

Olivia Doesn’t Do a Painted-on Face

New interview of Olivia by Bee Shapiro and portrait by I Tiner for The New York Times! Read the interview below and take a look at the high quality photo by clicking on it!

Olivia Wilde, 33, is known for her work as an actress, but these days she is trying on multiple roles. Recently she was the executive producer of “Fear Us Women,” a documentary that follows a volunteer soldier in the YPJ, an all-female Kurdish army. Also keeping her busy: acting in and producing the crime drama “A Vigilante,” out later this year, and touting True Botanicals, a skin care line she has invested in. Born in Manhattan, raised in Washington, D.C., and now living in Brooklyn, Ms. Wilde uses her days off to pop into the Brooklyn Museum for First Saturdays or to do hip-hop yoga in Union Square. Find out more about her wellness and beauty routine, below.

When I meet Olivia Wilde in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn, I find her in a big bay window seat at one of her favorite local spots, the sunlit Maison May café. She orders a latte, we spill out the contents of her bag to talk about her favorite things— including the beauty essentials from natural skin-care brand True Botanicals, for which she is chief brand activist—and we immediately get deep into politics. If I walked away from my conversation with her thinking one thing, it was this: Even in a world getting exponentially more informed every day, Wilde makes smart, involved, and well-read look cooler than ever.

Skin Care

I do enjoy the ritual of my morning. It helps me wake up psychologically as much as physically. I wash with True Botanicals Hydrating Cleanser — it’s really gentle. Then I spritz on some of the Nutrient Mist. Of all the True Botanicals products, it’s one of my favorites. It always smells amazing. I use the brand’s face oils, too. If I’m having breakouts, I use the one they have for clearing up skin, and then the tinted SPF. If I’m running around, I like Ursa Major Essential Face Wipes because they clean and moisturize at the same time.

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Coveteur Interview & New Photoshoot

Olivia got coffee with Coveteour in Brooklyn to talk about politics and beauty. She was also photographed by J. Rosenberg for the occasion. We added 15 high quality photos to the gallery. She looks gorgeous in them, check them out and read the article below!

When I meet Olivia Wilde in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn, I find her in a big bay window seat at one of her favorite local spots, the sunlit Maison May café. She orders a latte, we spill out the contents of her bag to talk about her favorite things— including the beauty essentials from natural skin-care brand True Botanicals, for which she is chief brand activist—and we immediately get deep into politics. If I walked away from my conversation with her thinking one thing, it was this: Even in a world getting exponentially more informed every day, Wilde makes smart, involved, and well-read look cooler than ever.

And it’s in her blood. Wilde’s mother, Leslie Cockburn, is running for Congress in Virginia (and aren’t we all particularly pumped about women running for office in Virginia these days?), and Wilde talked excitedly about the inspiration she derives. No wonder, then, her unusual title with True Botanicals.

“I’m not interested in just being the face for the company,” says Wilde, who was the spokesmodel for Revlon from 2011 to 2016. “Chief brand activist is more of a proactive role, it’s about helping other people find it, and to stand up for the values that the whole company was based on. Whether that’s writing op-eds, doing a TED talk, just talking to every woman I meet about alternatives, it’s sort of all-inclusive.”

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The Hollywood Reporter [New Photoshoot]

Olivia is featured on the September 20 2017 issue of The Hollywood Reporter alongside Rosie Assoulin. We added 5 new photos from the photoshoot by D Needleman. We also added the digital scans and screencaps from the backstage video. She looks super beautiful, so stunning! They’re all in the photogallery so take a look!

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Watch What Happens Live [Photos]

Olivia made an appearance on Bravo’s Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen on July 25, 2017. She looked absolutely gorgeous, we love her outfit and make-up! Unfortunately there isn’t a link available to see the interview especially for the people outside the US. If you live in the US check out this link for some highlights.

Olivia on The Today Show [Caps + Photos]

Olivia stopped by The Today Show to talk about her Broadway debut in 1984. The play opened on June 22, 2017 and you can get your tickets! She looked gorgeous! We added 3 photos and over 320+ HD screencaptures from the interview to the photogallery and in case you missed it, you can watch it here.

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Al Franken & Olivia Wilde: Calling a Lie a Lie

Twenty years before Kellyanne Conway seized the news cycle with “alternative facts” about President Trump’s inaugural crowd size, Al Franken (now, Senator Al Franken) began a satirical cottage industry to expose the seemingly loose grasp on truth of various right-wing pundits in such books as “Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look at the Right.” Nearly 50 years before that, George Orwell published his dystopian classic, “Nineteen Eighty-Four,” with its “Ministry of Truth” for falsifying historical events and “double-think,” the simultaneous acceptance of two contradictory ideas as true. The 1949 novel became a best-seller again after the Trump inauguration.

Now, “1984,” a play by Robert Icke and Duncan Macmillan, based on the novel, is opening on Broadway on Thursday. Earlier productions in London received critical acclaim. But after the election of Mr. Trump, with his frequent complaints about “fake news” and propensity to trade in demonstrable falsehoods, the New York production is swimming in relevance.

Olivia Wilde is making her Broadway debut as one of the play’s stars. The actress, 33, is best known for her role as Thirteen on the medical drama “House.” She has appeared in a number of films, including “Her,” “Drinking Buddies” and “Rush,” and she starred in “Vinyl,” the HBO series about the recording industry.

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Olivia on the Politics of ‘Natural’ Beauty

Both of Olivia Wilde’s parents were Washington, D.C., journalists, so it should be no surprise that the actress is passionate about her politics, even when it comes to the politics of “natural” beauty. After being the face of Revlon, Wilde’s newest gig is being chief brand activist for True Botanicals, a “natural” beauty line that Unilever acquired a minority stake in last month. The Cut talked to Wilde and Christina Mace-Turner and Hillary Peterson, True Botanicals’ co-founders, about how politics affects “natural” beauty regulation, its surprising clinical results compared to La Mer, and the “shit” she got about her #NoMelaniaHair hashtag.

So you were with Revlon for many years and now you’re the chief brand activist of True Botanicals. How did that happen?

OW: I’m very proud of that title. It means my partnership goes beyond just being the face, in being a partner and telling the story in different creative ways. I’m looking forward to helping consumers understand not only the products themselves and the experience in using them, but how they’re made, the supply chain, the ingredients, down to the packaging. If you’re the face of the brand, it’s not really even asked of you. They don’t expect you to have an interest in any of those things. It’s an entirely different experience.

With Revlon, it wasn’t jumping ship from one to the other. My relationship with Revlon ended in an organic, peaceful way. It was a fascinating experience to be part of a large brand. I learned a lot about the beauty industry through it. There was that space in between where I thought, I don’t know if I will do anything like that again. I was even interested in creating something myself. I thought I was going to have to create a True Botanicals.

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