logo
Built like Thor: The artist who wears Chris Hemsworth's hand-me-downs

Built like Thor: The artist who wears Chris Hemsworth's hand-me-downs

This story is part of the June 8 edition of Sunday Life. See all 14 stories.
Each week, we quiz a prominent person about their style and the inspiration behind it. Ahead, artist Otis Hope Carey.
How would you describe your style? It's somewhere between indie surf and arty. My personal style is influenced by my easy-going attitude towards life. Some days I'll dress up, and others I'm barefoot in board shorts.
What's the oldest thing in your wardrobe? A pair of black Prada dress shoes that are probably nine years old. I still wear them.
And the most recent addition? A black cashmere jacket from Acne.
What would you wear … on a first date? Cargo shorts, a cool tee, slides and a nice watch. … on a plane? I recently flew to Bali and wore a pair of light workout shorts with a tee, oversized jumper and slides. … on the red carpet? I'll wear a suit that Chris Hemsworth gave me. We're good friends and he gave me five of his old suits that had been custom-made in Italy.
What's your favourite fashion era? It's now. I'm 37, and it has taken me this long to know who I am and what I'm comfortable wearing.
Who are your favourite designers? I've always loved Acne, and I've got a lot of Carhartt in my wardrobe. I've surfed my whole life, so I've got broad shoulders and the cuts of those labels fit my body well. I live in Myocum, near Byron Bay, and I'm always painting and doing stuff around the property; I'll throw a Carhartt jacket on in the morning and I'm done.
What's your fragrance of choice? Maison Margiela's 'Replica by the Fireplace'.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

An LA couple turned this art-deco London bolthole into an oasis of quiet luxury
An LA couple turned this art-deco London bolthole into an oasis of quiet luxury

Sydney Morning Herald

time4 days ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

An LA couple turned this art-deco London bolthole into an oasis of quiet luxury

This story is part of the August 17 edition of Sunday Life. See all 13 stories. The vibrant London neighbourhood of Marylebone features many fine homes from the Georgian, Victorian and Edwardian eras, as well as art deco-style properties from the 1920s. In one such building, a spacious flat serves as a European pied-à-terre for a Los Angeles-based couple and their two daughters. It has been skilfully transformed by Maddux Creative, an interior design firm founded by Jo leGleud and Scott Maddux with offices in London and New York. 'The Marylebone apartment allowed us to honour historical elements while injecting the space with contemporary design,' says Maddux. 'The challenge was to respect its art deco origins while introducing modern touches that made the space feel current and lived-in.' To that end, the firm remodelled the two-bedroom apartment by merging British classicism and Parisian charm with modernity. Original features such as mouldings, parquetry flooring and coffered ceilings were retained and restored while functionality was updated. This provided the home with European sophistication akin to that found in Parisian Haussmann or Berliner Altbau apartments. However, the designers were careful to quietly weave contemporary accents into the home's heritage bones. 'We felt it was important to blur the line between being able to tell if something was original or new,' Maddux says. 'This allowed us to push boundaries and flex our artistic ideas, an approach that was crucial in overcoming the biggest challenge: creating a space that felt both luxurious and liveable without resembling a gallery.' Throughout the apartment, tactile materials and styled vignettes dot the interior spaces, offering visual interest and referencing the dynamic and fashionable character of Marylebone. Elsewhere, pastel hues and refined wall treatments create a canvas for the owners' contemporary art collection. 'Our goal was to establish a home that exuded relaxation and freshness, avoiding extremes of overpowering elements or blandness,' says leGleud. 'My training in embroidery honed my eye for a balanced integration of textures and colours, a theme reflected throughout the entire apartment.' With these design principles in mind, the Maddux Creative team employed a soft, muted palette of pale aqua and chalky off-white with accents of red and gold. 'This was inspired by a desire to create a calming yet sophisticated atmosphere that complemented the owners' art collection,' says leGleud. The apartment features two bedrooms with ensuites, a powder room, a spacious entrance hallway, a kitchen and a living room with a dining area that opens to a library. The compact burnished brass-clad kitchen makes an exceptionally strong statement. 'We opted for a galley-style kitchen, small but perfectly formed,' says Maddux. 'We chose slabs of Calacatta Verde marble for countertops and an injection of subtle colour, and painted the room in the delightfully edible hue of 'Sesame' from Paint Library London. This creates a lovely vignette visible through the open door.' The largest room, containing both the sitting and dining areas, showcases a gradual transition of colour through layered shapes and shades over existing wall panelling. Experimentation continues in the adjoining library, where three different shades of green highlight the mouldings. 'The original elements provide a historical context, and are complemented by the contemporary, such as the colour-block paint effect and modern furnishings,' leGleud explains. Decor for the residence is a mix of custom, contemporary and vintage. The designers commissioned pieces for the apartment, notably the serpentine sofa in the living room, based on an antique design. Stand-out designer pieces are the Lampert + Harper daybed upholstered in red leather and the mirrored artwork by Sabine Marcelis and Brit van Nerven that hangs above the fireplace. Other designer furniture includes a vintage Eero Saarinen sofa, a contemporary Christophe Delcourt sofa, a mid-century Paolo Buffa armchair and a sleek Villiers cocktail table. Loading Turkish rugs, French antique furniture, Danish dining chairs, global textiles and international art reflect the homeowners' love of travel and culture. 'Luxurious materials and sumptuous fabrics in the living and bedroom areas, such as patterned cushions and textured curtains, provide a cohesive, elegant sensibility to the entire apartment,' says leGleud. 'For example, dark-blue textured wallpaper in the primary bedroom provides a soulful backdrop, allowing for a layering of textures in bed linens and furniture.' The soft-pink guest bedroom features a magical artwork by Lorna Simpson above the bed. The subtle pink theme carries into the ensuite, balanced with buttery-green accents. The ensuite bathrooms are unified by intricate Jean Cocteau-inspired mosaic floors and polished plaster walls. The recurring curved arches evoke a feeling of 1920s glamour, intrinsic to the fabric of the building. 'The bespoke metal shower screen we designed completes this stunning vignette and provides elegant function,' says leGleud. 'We also commissioned Isabella Day to paint a playful mural inspired by French artist Christian Bérard for the powder room.' Set against a backdrop that fuses old and new, the smooth flow of muted shades punctuated by accents of red and gold creates a glamorous and relaxing atmosphere. 'Every detail, from the carefully selected colour palette to the bespoke furniture, was aimed at creating an elegant and personal sanctuary for our clients,' says Maddux.

I'm 38 and a public figure, but I've never been in a long-term relationship
I'm 38 and a public figure, but I've never been in a long-term relationship

Sydney Morning Herald

time4 days ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

I'm 38 and a public figure, but I've never been in a long-term relationship

This story is part of the August 17 edition of Sunday Life. See all 13 stories. David Stevens is better known by his stage name, David the Medium. The 38-year-old clairvoyant and spiritual medium came out as gay in the early 2000s but has never had a long-term relationship. Here, he talks about the important women in his life, especially his mum, Anne. My maternal grandmother, June, was like a second mother to me. She retired young due to health issues, which meant I spent a lot of time with her. We went on trips to Darwin together because she loved the hot weather – and crocodiles! She was a fun 'rocker' grandmother: her favourite artists were Kris Kristofferson and Jim Morrison. She also loved the TV series Angel, a Buffy the Vampire Slayer spin-off. She was very intuitive and also read tarot cards. My paternal grandmother, Rae, worked full-time in the 1960s and raised three kids. Her first child was stillborn and she was told to keep going and move on after such a traumatic event – very typical of that generation. Despite this sadness, she always had a sense of humour and was loving and protective. She passed away in 2018. My mum, Anne, is my best friend. We live in the same apartment complex in Port Melbourne and I see her every day. She was a stay-at-home mother when we were growing up, but once she split with Dad she went back into the workforce. She retired five years ago from a corporate administration role at a law firm. Mum gives good advice but she is also very matter-of-fact. My parents didn't have a great relationship and she was good at protecting us from that. My older brother, Aaron, and I are good people because of her upbringing. Mum said Dad put her off men. She hasn't re-partnered and is very independent. I have saved Mum's life three times. The first was 12 years ago. She had a lung infection that she ignored and which turned into pneumonia, then an internal infection. If I hadn't been there to call an ambulance, they told me she would have died. On Father's Day in 2019, Mum rang me to say she wasn't feeling well. I experienced a divine intervention telling me to go and see her. When I got to her place, she was lying in the bathroom after a heart attack. I called triple-0 and saw Mum lifting herself off the floor. She made a miraculous recovery. Then, two weeks later, she had a gall bladder infection. If I hadn't randomly visited her, she wouldn't have survived. We're energetically connected. Mum always said I was an intuitive child. She was supportive of me when I told her I was going from a career in legal administration to becoming a full-time medium. There was that motherly fear – 'Will he be OK?' – but she never stopped me.

Why Uma Thurman said no to action roles for two decades, and what brought her back
Why Uma Thurman said no to action roles for two decades, and what brought her back

Sydney Morning Herald

time4 days ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Why Uma Thurman said no to action roles for two decades, and what brought her back

This story is part of the August 17 edition of Sunday Life. See all 13 stories. There is something deliciously subversive about Uma Thurman. We are talking over Zoom, Thurman in the top-floor bedroom of her rural retreat just outside New York, wearing what looks like a gamekeeper's gilet, with no make-up and her hair unruly; gorgeous even when off-duty. 'You don't want to make a girl be obedient; it's not in her best interests,' she is saying, her voice patrician but her smile somehow naughty; it's in her eyes, too. We are talking about our daughters, both 13 and liable to barge in at any moment despite being told not to. 'It's kind of wonderful that they know the rules and don't always listen.' She could be talking about herself. Thurman – famous for her totemic performances in the Quentin Tarantino films Pulp Fiction and Kill Bill: Volume 1 and Volume 2, as well as for movies like the Oscar-winning Dangerous Liaisons, the sci-fi Gattaca and Lars von Trier's Nymphomaniac – likes to confound expectations. After Pulp Fiction, for which she was nominated for an Oscar and a Golden Globe, she did not make a big-budget film for three years. And since making Kill Bill, in which she plays a vengeful assassin expertly schooled in martial arts, she has not wielded a sword on screen. Instead, she has spent the past two decades turning down action roles, doing rom-coms and contemporary drama and appearing on Broadway. 'I did anything but, many times,' she says. 'I didn't grind out a whole bunch of follow-up action movies because I felt I had done something significant in the field. And it was fun to not overplay it,' she says with a smile. 'But at the same time I can't stay out of it forever.' And so we now have two opportunities to see Thurman kick butt once again. In fact, towards the end of the new Netflix film The Old Guard 2, there is a scene that will have a certain sort of cineaste very excited indeed. Thurman, who plays a jaded 5000-year-old immortal called Discord, has an epic sword fight in front of a secret nuclear facility with her fellow immortal, Andromache, played by Charlize Theron – also a co-producer of the film and its predecessor. 'Andy' is a Scythian warrior whose preferred weapon is a hefty axe. It's Kill Bill' s bloody Bride versus Mad Max' s Imperator Furiosa, two icons of female vengeance and power, a fever dream of steel on steel. And even though it has been more than 20 years, Thurman, now 55, hasn't forgotten all her moves. 'Thank God for that, because I signed on quite late for this project so I didn't have time to do proper training,' she says. 'Fortunately I had put in hundreds of hours learning how to hold a sword.' For the two Kill Bill films, Thurman trained for eight hours a day for three months. 'You may not be limber and strong,' she continues, 'but if your brain has learnt how to memorise sequences of movements, you can get back in that zone.' The film, which is based on a comic book, is essentially about a band of age-old warriors using their supernatural powers to assist their less-gifted fellow humans. Theron's Andy is their leader, and both the original and the sequel were directed by women, Gina Prince-Bythewood and Victoria Mahoney respectively. 'With The Old Guard, I thought that first movie was really unusual, a superb female-led action film that had depth, drama and really beautiful, naturalistic acting,' Thurman says. Another draw was the opportunity to work with Theron. 'Charlize is a miraculous performer, a very powerful individual and as charismatic in person as on screen. And I liked the idea of playing a supporting role to another actress who I thought had done really significant work in the drama/action field.' Likewise, Theron had long wanted to cross swords with Thurman. 'I have always admired Uma from afar,' she reveals via email. 'From Dangerous Liaisons to Kill Bill, her work is a masterclass in finding the micro in characters. She knows exactly how to change her cadence in a second to convey something so intimate, so subtle, just out of nowhere. In moments I got so lost watching her in scenes we had together that I had to remind myself I was in the scene with her. She's that captivating! I love her curiosity. Her willingness to switch things on the spot. And her truly good nature. She is kind to the bone.' Thurman's other big project this year is Dexter: Resurrection, a reboot of the celebrated mid-noughties TV series Dexter about a serial killer with a moral compass. In this new season, Michael C. Hall returns in the titular role, while Thurman plays the head of security to a billionaire, played by Peter Dinklage, who is so obsessed with serial killers that he hosts a sort of psychopaths' convention in his fancy mansion. In the second episode we see Thurman's character about to do away with an errant serial killer with a nail-studded baseball bat. 'It has a real black humour to it, but it takes itself seriously enough that it doesn't take the bite out of the blackness,' she says. Thurman was 24 when she appeared in Pulp Fiction. She played Mia Wallace, the wife of a crime boss. She danced barefoot with John Travolta's character, Vincent Vega, overdosed on heroin, was brought around by a shot of adrenaline to the heart and became a cultural icon: her black-fringed bob and monochrome wardrobe a defining 1990s aesthetic. Thurman says she didn't realise the film would have such an impact while she was making it. 'I knew it was special, you could tell from the writing, the uniqueness, but it was a relatively small film.' And by this point she had been working as an actress for nearly a decade. Thurman's childhood defied conventions. Her father, Robert Thurman, is one of the world's foremost professors of Tibetan Buddhism, having been ordained as a monk by the Dalai Lama in 1965. In 1967 he married the German-Swedish model turned psychotherapist Nena von Schlebrügge, who had been previously married to the LSD guru Timothy Leary. The pair bought some land in Massachusetts, built a house and raised their four children, three boys and Uma, although there were occasional stints in India. 'I didn't really understand that I was an American until I was about 13,' Thurman says. 'I was raised by a very European woman, so it was kind of late news to me that I wasn't really a Swedish girl.' Both of her parents were extraordinary in their own ways. 'My mother had a very eventful life. She was discovered by [British photographer] Norman Parkinson in a schoolyard in Stockholm when she was 13. He took a test photo of her and gave her his card. Two years later, when she was 15 or 16, she took off, rang him up and became a model.' So when Thurman, aged 15, her parents on sabbatical in Japan, decided to leave her boarding school to go to New York, by herself, to pursue an acting career, her parents did not try to stop her. 'I knew very clearly that I was going to be an actress and I very much wanted to go out on my own,' she says. 'Both my parents did the same sort of thing when they were young. They were very independent. So I think there was a certain amount of being raised to be independent.' Today Thurman has her own family. There are her children from her second marriage to her Gattaca co-star Ethan Hawke: Maya Hawke, 27, and Levon Hawke, 23, both in the family business. (Thurman's first marriage, to Gary Oldman, was brief and tempestuous; she was 19 and he was 31, and they divorced in 1992.) The father of Thurman's 13-year-old, Luna, is the financier Arpad 'Arki' Busson, with whom Thurman had a relationship between 2007 and 2014. As a mother she finds the freedoms she was given as a teenage girl 'mind-boggling. I mean, it's unimaginable. Those were different times.' Aged 15, she was making her own money, finding her way around the city, going to auditions, 'with just a Filofax and a quarter in case I got lost and needed to call someone'. She did some modelling to help pay for acting classes, appearing on the cover of British Vogue in 1985, travelling to Europe for work. Thurman says this period was both scary and exciting. 'It was very much navigating an adult world, so there was a lot of pretending to be older.' Aged 17, she was cast in Terry Gilliam's film The Adventures of Baron Munchausen as the goddess Venus, emerging naked from an enormous clamshell, her husband, the uxorious Vulcan, played by Oliver Reed. 'That really turned the dial for me,' she says. 'Before that, a part of me didn't know whether it would all be a dead end, as a good Swede is likely to tell you. It was at that moment I realised that I wasn't going back to school. Seeing a great director on a mad project, it was the moment I saw that I was truly on my path.' The path was never direct. Thurman's approach has always been to jump between genres, to take on odd projects, like Gus Van Sant's Even Cowgirls Get the Blues, rather than obvious ones, like The Lord of the Rings. This was in part because she did not have formal training as an actor and so saw each project as an opportunity to learn. 'I kept finding different, unique projects that would really require me to stretch. And from that kind of elasticity, that's how I helped myself grow.' Loading I ask what advice she has given to her daughter Maya. 'Oh, she knows what she's doing. She went to [the acting school] Juilliard, thank god. She actually finished high school. And what I did learn [about mothering] is that nobody listens. So it's really about being there for them rather than telling them what to do.' She has let Maya have free range in her wardrobe, ransacking it for the Nineties classics; Thurman was famously the first person to wear Prada to the Oscars. 'There's very little left of it; she's done a good job,' she says, not seeming to mind. 'I don't spend a lot of my everyday life dressing up.' After almost three decades of parenting, with her youngest now a teenager, Thurman is reaching what she calls her 'sunset period' of mothering. 'It's beautiful and there's not that much time left in the day,' she says. She is starting to think about what comes next, when she doesn't have to invest so much energy in 'shopping and driving and emailing teachers and all the things we do'. She has always had an ambition to direct, but that is for when she has more time. For now she's still just trying to fit it all in: work, parenting, looking after herself. To relax she does yoga and Pilates, goes for walks, cooks. She used to be a big reader of non-fiction but no more. 'Now non-fiction is just too brutal,' she says. I ask what she does read. 'Oh, the world has driven me to romantasy. Really, really teenage stuff. It's a great alternative to the newspapers right now.' Does she have any recommendations? 'I can't tell you. It will make me blush,' she says, smiling, delighted, it seems, to continue to defy expectations. The Sunday Times/The Times UK

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store