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Is Dua Lipa the best literary interviewer?
Is Dua Lipa the best literary interviewer?

The Guardian

time06-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Is Dua Lipa the best literary interviewer?

D ua Lipa is, obviously, good at a lot of things. She sings, she dances, she writes dozens of songs, and she co-designed a collection with Donatella Versace. But if someone told you that she'd recently come out on top in a Mortal Kombat-style contest as the best literary interviewer, you'd probably think they'd taken her song Hallucinate a bit too literally. Nevertheless, that's what's happened, in a YouTube video that has garnered more than a million views in a matter of weeks. And the case it makes is … surprisingly convincing. 'I was researching a video essay about the quality of literary interviews in different venues,' says writer Blake Lefray, who put the video together for his fledgling channel. He came across Lipa's interview with Hernan Diaz, author of the Pulitzer prize-winning Trust, and was 'pretty blown away'. Though he had seen Diaz interviewed several times by journalists and TV hosts, Lipa's interview was 'easily the best', he says. 'At first, I thought crowning Dua Lipa the best current interviewer of novelists would be a ridiculous bit of clickbait – but the more I watched her interviews, the more I realised that, for me personally, she's the best one doing it right now. She asks smart questions dipped in empathy and curiosity.' This sounds like hyperbole, but after you watch a couple of interviews, it's quickly noticeable that something feels different from the usual round of PR-prepared soundbites. In the Diaz interview, Lipa asks if one of his characters is based on an investigative journalist whose exposé of John D Rockefeller helped to break up the Standard Oil Trust – and Diaz, who's never heard of the journalist before, seems astonished. A chat with Nobel laureate Olga Tokarczuk includes a lengthy digression on the importance of William Blake as an anti-establishment figure in communist Poland. A conversation with Lincoln in the Bardo author George Saunders segues into a discussion about the importance of being non-judgmental during first drafts, and includes a (slightly star-struck) Saunders asking Lipa how it felt to perform at Glastonbury. skip past newsletter promotion Sign up to Bookmarks Discover new books and learn more about your favourite authors with our expert reviews, interviews and news stories. Literary delights delivered direct to you Privacy Notice: Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties. For more information see our Privacy Policy. We use Google reCaptcha to protect our website and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. after newsletter promotion All of this isn't exactly standard for broadcasted author interviews. On late-night shows, questions are typically fluff – Jimmy Fallon's first question is usually some variation on 'How does it feel to have written such a bestselling book?', while Seth Meyers spent a chunk of his own interview with Diaz asking about the pen he uses to write longhand. Lorraine Kelly and Angela Rippon are a bit better at probing questions, but their segments are so short that there's barely time to hit more than the key points, let alone get into a meandering discussion about destiny, empathy or marriage equality under rightwing governments. Podcasts and book festivals are, of course, much better – and possibly a fairer comparison, but as Lefray notes, they are a lot less consistent than Lipa: occasionally awkward, sometimes excruciating, and far too fond of using the qualifier 'sort of'. So how is she doing it? Firstly, Lipa seems to read a lot: in a keynote speech on the power of reading at the 2022 Booker prize, she mentions learning about the Albanian spirit of resistance through the work of author Ismail Kadare as a teenager. Her interviews are part of the book club she runs through her lifestyle website Service95, and while a cynic might suggest they're a way to build a personal brand while pocketing a bit of affiliate-link cash (Reese Witherspoon, Dakota Fanning, Natalie Portman and Fallon himself are just a few of the celebrities to have their own clubs along with, of course, Oprah), she started her first book club with some close friends back in 2019. She was posting recommendations on Instagram long before Service95, and her own bookshelf, tantalisingly visible in most of her interviews, is stuffed with an impressively esoteric mix of books, from Katy Hessel's The Story of Art Without Men to Joe Coscarelli's Rap Capital. Maybe, as someone who's given hundreds of interviews in her time, she also understands what makes a good interview: the questions artists love and hate, the sorts of things they wish they were asked, and the things that make them open up. It's unclear if she alone writes the questions – her reps didn't respond to a request for comment – but she clearly knows the material: she's always familiar with side characters and subplots, and never seems caught off guard by an unplanned author aside. Beyond all of that, perhaps Dua Lipa is a good interviewer because she reads the books the way authors hope they'll be read: diving into their characters and worlds for the sheer joy of the experience. It's obvious she reads thoughtfully and deeply, bringing her to an understanding of each work that naturally leads her to want to know more. Listen to enough of her interviews, and her enthusiasm is so infectious that it's difficult not to want to read more, or read more broadly, or just read better . All of that, and she also wrote Houdini. Time to step it up, Fallon.

Designer Prabal Gurung – who has dressed Kamala Harris, Oprah Winfrey and Michelle Obama – draws inspo from Nepal's culture, crafts and mountains, and loves oud and David Attenborough
Designer Prabal Gurung – who has dressed Kamala Harris, Oprah Winfrey and Michelle Obama – draws inspo from Nepal's culture, crafts and mountains, and loves oud and David Attenborough

South China Morning Post

time01-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • South China Morning Post

Designer Prabal Gurung – who has dressed Kamala Harris, Oprah Winfrey and Michelle Obama – draws inspo from Nepal's culture, crafts and mountains, and loves oud and David Attenborough

Nepali-American designer Prabal Gurung is as global as his designs. Born in Singapore, he was raised in Nepal's capital, Kathmandu, and now helms the eponymous New York-based atelier he launched in 2009. He prides himself on celebrating cultural identity and championing inclusivity, and has dressed the likes of Kamala Harris , Michelle Obama and Oprah Winfrey. Since 2022, he has been vice-chairman of the Council of Fashion Designers of America. Reading matters Hernan Diaz won the Pulitzer Prize for his 2022 novel Trust. Photo: Amazon Advertisement Trust by Hernan Diaz is one of the best books I've read in a long time. It talks about men taking over space and hardly giving women their credit. That's the world we live in, and it talks about it so beautifully – it is bone-chillingly amazing. Instagram loves Sir David Attenborough, as seen on The Green Planet, in December 2021. Photo: BBC Studios Recently, I started following Instagram accounts that share clips of animals like @thedodo and animal documentaries like @animalplanet. Anytime I come across David Attenborough's voice-overs I listen, and that's how I get ready for bed. Grooming essentials Oud oil, widely used in perfumery, is derived from agarwood, also called aloeswood. /iStockphoto I'm a little indulgent when it comes to beauty and self-care. I was in Saudi Arabia two years back and I bought oud oil at a local market. I just mix it with my perfumes from Chanel and Jo Malone. Souvenir hunt

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