Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Get unlimited access to 10,000+ magazines, newspapers and Premium stories for just

$149.99
 
$74.99/Year

Try GOLD - Free

Shades of stardom

Vanity Fair US

|

December 2023 - January 2024

Sandra Hüller is in two riveting films this awards season, the moral thriller Anatomy of a Fall and the Holocaust drama The Zone of Interest. The German actor isn't after the spotlight-but she may not have a choice

- By David Canfield. Photographs by Emma Summerton

Shades of stardom

THE LAUDED GERMAN comedy Toni Erdmann features Sandra Hüller singing what has to be the most triumphantly awkward performance of “Greatest Love of All” in cinematic history. Hüller’s Ines, a closed-off corporate consultant living in Bucharest, spends nearly three hours onscreen enduring the outrageous pranks of her estranged father as he reenters her life to lighten her up and strengthen their bond. His climactic stunt—fooling Ines into taking on an American classic at a Romanian stranger’s Easter party—risks her total humiliation. Stiff in a white buttondown and black blazer, trying to bury her thick German accent, she stumbles into the song while her father, donning a ridiculous wig and false teeth, plays piano beside her. A few minutes in, she’s all but screaming the lyrics. This emotional crescendo, so fully earned in Hüller’s bracing turn, marks the moment that a generational talent revealed herself.

Hüller was in her late 30s then, with more than a decade of film credits behind her. Still, Toni Erdmann brought her to the US for the first time ever, thanks to a successful push for a best international film Oscar nomination. Fans here had no idea who she was and treated her like a discovery. It all seemed to promise a bright, glitzy future as a movie star. “But nothing happened after,” Hüller says now from her home in Germany, not a shred of disappointment in her voice. “It can just be over in a minute, and that’s okay.”

MORE STORIES FROM Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

BROKEN ARTED

Barbara Guggenheim and Abigail Asher were, until recently, grandes dames of the art market, outfitting the most powerful people in the world with killer portfolios. Then, in a flurry of mutual allegations ranging from sexual favors to fraud, the two women parted ways. As their battle heads to court

time to read

19 mins

November 2025

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

THE LAST STAND

Richard Prince has shocked the cultural establishment again and again with norm-breaking—some say lawbreaking—conceptual artworks. But since the pandemic, he's been holed up in his Hamptons home, rarely making appearances. In an unprecedented interview late in his career, he spills to NATE FREEMAN about the surprising new series he calls Folk Songs and his six-hour film, Deposition. And for the first time, he discusses what will happen to his estate after he's gone

time to read

29 mins

November 2025

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

Captain America?

NYC's mayoral candidate has Kennedy-like charisma, a global profile, and nepo baby instincts.

time to read

36 mins

November 2025

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

Brat's Next Act

Just married. Pivoting to film in magnificent fashion. After a seemingly endless summer of brat, Charli xcx talks to ANNA PEELE about her new season of stardom

time to read

20 mins

November 2025

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

LARRY GAGOSIAN

The world's grandest art dealer and new owner of Book Hampton, the celebrated tome slinger to East End Brahmins — on summering in Capri, wading in warm St. Barts waters, his custom-made pool cue, and sitting for David Hockney

time to read

1 mins

November 2025

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

He Got His MTV

TOM FRESTON helped birth MTV and reinvent television. In an excerpt from his new memoir, Unplugged: Adventures from MTV to Timbuktu, he recalls the campaign that saved the network

time to read

5 mins

November 2025

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

THE ARTIST IS PRESENT

As ICE continues mass detainments and deportations, artist Isabelle Brourman has spent months inside the New York City federal immigration court. She spoke with KEZIAH WEIR about the scenes of brutality and emotional strength she's documented, in rooms where cameras aren't allowed

time to read

6 mins

November 2025

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

From Bust to Bust

Andrew Ross Sorkin tells NATALIE KORACH his new book on 1929 works as a parable for today—down to the characters

time to read

5 mins

November 2025

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

Realm of the Coin

In a financial system upended by cryptocurrencies and meme stocks, where value is detached from utility and the loudest voice gets richest, ZOË BERNARD tours a brave new world in Bel Air that is part Bravolebrity, part Wolf of Wall Street, and all casino

time to read

13 mins

November 2025

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

MUSE AND MAKER

The painter Kate Capshaw, known for her intimate likenesses, could hardly say no when the National Portrait Gallery commissioned one of Steven Spielberg, her husband of more than 30 years

time to read

2 mins

November 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size