Ursula Corberó Covers Vogue España May 2025 in Elizaveta Porodina Excavation
/Ursula Corberó Covers Vogue España May 2025 in an Elizaveta Porodina Production AOC Fashion
At her inaugural 2025 SAG Awards, the Spanish actor Ursula Corberó captured attention in a knitted mini trapeze Loewe dress featuring shimmering mother-of-pearl-effect sequins. The event celebrated her nomination for Best Ensemble in a Drama Series for her performance in ‘The Day of the Jackal’.
Ursula Corberó covers the May 2025 issue of Vogue Espana [IG], styled by Helena Tejedor in Balenciaga, Cartier, Coperni, Courreges, Dior, Fendi, Giorgio Armani, Intimissimi, Jean Paul Gaultier, Loewe, Maison Aläia and more./ Hair by Karim Belghiran; makeup by Karin Westerlund
Read the interview with Javier Calvo [English translation works] at Vogue España.
Does Ursula Corberó Have ‘Killer Instincts’?
Corberó is well-acquainted with the thriller genre. Whether she’s Tokyo, the de facto leader behind Spain’s biggest bank heists in Netflix’s ‘Money Heist’, or portraying The Baroness, a skilled agent of the villainous Cobra in the 2021 film ‘Snake Eyes’, the actor clearly has the psychological, emotional, physical conditioning and personality tools to shine in female action roles.
However, in her latest performance as Nuria, the unknowing wife of the mysterious assassin, ‘The Jackal’ [played by Eddie Redmayne], Corberó shifts from her usual intense-characters portfolio to one that is more delicate and emotional.
Dare we say ‘complex’?
Forget Ghost Busters or an Exorcist: Call Porodina
Who better to photograph a talented, female actor playing a ‘psychologically complex’ woman than Elizaveta Porodina? [IG] The creator of wide-ranging visual portraits of women writes to the actor — while speaking simultaneously to her followers:
“. . . dark sorcery happening — or is it all in her head — what is the story that you are reading?”
Anne asks: As humans, don’t we create some kind of storyline around the simplest observation we have of another person? What’s our storytelling accuracy rate with the real story? Perhaps 10%?