Tracee Ellis Ross Serves Statement Looks For Porter Magazine’s New Issue

Tracee Ellis Ross is the cover girl for magazine’s latest issue! The Black-ish star is pictured in  looks that are very much in her whee...

Tracee Ellis Ross is the cover girl for magazine’s latest issue!

The Black-ish star is pictured in  looks that are very much in her wheelhouse. from joyful looks by Balenciaga and Christopher John Rogers, to statement Alexander McQueen, Christopher Kane, Loewe, A.W.A.K.E Mode, Richard Quinn, Emilia Wickstead and jewelry from Katkim and Laura Lombardi.

For the cover story, she talks about to Martha Hayes about her views on  finally facing her fears about music, her role in the upcoming High Note;  the impact her mother had on her, what fashion and beauty means to her and more.

Read excerpts from her cover story below

On the impact fashion and watching her mother had on her

“Fashion has played an equally important role in Ross’s life. It’s only now that she’s able to articulate the powerful impact watching her mother transform into “different versions of herself” had on her. “Clothing, hair and makeup were not part of the male gaze for my mom,” says Ross. “She owned her sensuality and her sexuality in a way I found very empowering because it wasn’t about ‘look at me’, it was about, ‘this is me’.

On  what’s next for her

Next on her agenda in 2020 is executive producing and providing the voice in a spin-off of cult MTV animated series Daria, about her friend Jodie (“It’s a metaphor for what’s happening right now – to take the sidekick black girl and allow her to move into the lead position to tell her story”), and unveiling more products from her hair company, Pattern, the company she started last year, actualising her 10-year dream of launching haircare, “to meet the un-met needs of the curly, coily and tight-textured community”.

On her iconic speech at the 2017 American Glamour’s Women of the Year Summit 

.. she addressed people’s response to her as a woman over 45 who is not married and is without children, coming to the powerful realization that “my life is mine”…We are told that our lives are not ours. We are taught and cultured in that way.”

 “It’s one of the reasons I feel so strongly about telling the stories that I tell. I wish I had known there were other choices, not just about how I could be living, but how I could feel about the way my life was. I was raised by society to dream of my wedding, but I wish I had been dreaming of my life. There are so many ways to curate happiness, find love and create a family, and we don’t talk about them. It creates so much shame and judgement.”

People misinterpret being happily single as not wanting to be in a relationship. Of course I want to be in a relationship, but what am I going to do? Spend all the time that I’m not [in one] moping around? No. I’m going to live my life to the fullest and I’m going to be happy right here, where I am.

On the atmosphere on set of ‘The High Note’

“We are all very strong, opinionated, clear-minded, hard-working women who cared a lot and invested a lot in what we were doing,” she continues of the atmosphere on set. “I’m mindful of not saying what it’s like working with women because it’s like saying what it’s like working with men or why you don’t want to work with women. What I know is that it was a great experience and I was really grateful.”

Read the full cover story on

Credits

Photography Olivia Malone

Styling Solange Franklin

Art direction Phil Buckingham

Hair Nai’vasha at The Wall Group

Makeup Samuel Paul at Forward Artists

Nails Maho Tanaka

Fashion Assistant Hannah Krall

Production Marcus Ward at Block Productions, Sharda Fahmel

The fun doesn’t stop here, visit www.bellanaijastyle.com for more on African fashion and lifestyle now!


Source: BellaNaija

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