For her Vogue cover story, Dua Lipa made roasted sea bass in Vogue’s kitchen for their Now Serving series. Check out the video below:
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For her Vogue cover story, Dua Lipa made roasted sea bass in Vogue’s kitchen for their Now Serving series. Check out the video below:
Dua Lipa is on the cover of British Vogue‘s July issue. In the interview, Dua talks about her upcoming 30th birthday, getting engaged to Callum Turner (and how they met), working on her fourth studio album, her full schedule, expanding the Service95 book club, and more. Click here to read the full interview, or check out the highlights below.

Dua and I meet for dinner at Mountain, a popular Michelin-star restaurant in London’s Soho. It’s just after Easter, which she has spent with her partner, the actor Callum Turner, at her family’s seaside home in Albania. Rested and happy to be back, she’s been in the studio all day, planting the first seeds of a new album, figuring out where she wants to go next. Each day she ends up with a new song. “It’s like going home with a little present,” she says.
“I turn 30 in August,” she explains over dinner, “and I’ve been thinking about it a lot, because your 20s are just so tumultuous in the way you think about yourself and your body. And I don’t know, now I feel like I’ve come to a place – I’ve become better at taking care of myself and working out and dancing. I feel the most confident I’ve ever felt. I feel very empowered and strong in my body. I feel good when I’m sharing my energy with people on stage. There’s just so much of that that makes me really proud of my body and the way it holds me.”
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“Yeah, we’re engaged,” she says over dinner. “It’s very exciting.” She tells me Callum had the ring made for her after consulting her best friends and her sister. “I’m obsessed with it. It’s so me. It’s nice to know the person that you’re going to spend the rest of your life with knows you very well.”
Dua first met Callum at The River Cafe in London – she was having dinner with her dad, he was out with friends. They were introduced by the restaurant’s cofounder, Ruth Rogers, but they’d almost met many times before.
“There’s a lot of Sliding Doors moments,” Dua explains. In 2014, she was working at La Bodega Negra; there’s a photo of him outside the same Soho spot that exact same year. In 2020, they went to the same last pre-lockdown party – they later found they had photos with the same guy in the background, one hour apart. “We have so many friends in common,” she says.
A year after their brief encounter at the restaurant, Dua was in LA having dinner with her friend Mustafa the Poet, “and all of a sudden Callum shows up”. She thought: “Oh, it’s that really hot guy from The River Cafe.” He asked her what she was reading. She said Hernan Diaz’s novel Trust. “And we both just happened to be reading the same book.” Does all of that make you feel you were destined to be together? “One thousand per cent.”
As for the wedding: no plans yet. “I want to finish my tour, Callum’s shooting, so we’re just enjoying this period. I’ve never been someone who’s really thought about a wedding, or dreamt about what kind of bride I would be. All of a sudden I’m like: ‘Oh, what would I wear?’” She says she’s seen many people get engaged “and never really understood the weight of it”. Now she realises: “This decision to grow old together, to see a life and just, I don’t know, be best friends forever – it’s a really special feeling.”
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Dua has inherited Turner’s rottweiler-labrador mix, and walking Golo together in the park every morning is her “favourite thing in the world”. Despite their busy working lives, she and Callum have a two-and-a-half week rule: they won’t be apart for longer. For her Antipodean tour earlier this year they had to break it – three weeks – and found that very hard. At home, they cook – Dua’s roast dinners are, her friends report, to die for. When they travel together they explore restaurants and buy vinyl in every city. They’re listening to a lot of Chris Stapleton (Dua performed a duet with him last year); Sade and Erykah Badu are currently on repeat.
“I’d love to have kids one day,” Dua says. “But it’s like the constant question of when would there ever be a good time – how it would fit in with my job and how it would work if I went on tour, and how much time out I’d have to take. I think it’s just one of those things that’s going to happen when it happens. I love kids, but I think there’s so much more to raising a child than just loving children.”
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Dua would be the first to admit that her personal taste in fiction slants towards vicarious pain. (“We love a sad book,” her sister, Rina, told me about them both.) Hanya Yanagihara’s A Little Life, Ocean Vuong’s On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous, Max Porter’s Grief is the Thing with Feathers: these are novels whose characters have suffered abuse, violence, loss. In interviewing their authors Dua has shown the natural compassion she extended, on her podcast, to the Yazidi Nobel Peace Prize winner Nadia Murad.
I wonder where this instinct comes from, and ask Dua about her greatest heartbreak. “I don’t think I’ve ever truly been heartbroken,” she says after some thought. “I think change can be painful. But I seem to pick myself up pretty quickly. I think maybe the crux of it is that everything that’s happened in my life never felt like a loss, but a lesson.”
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Dua’s daily schedule is “full, full, full, full, full”. She’s up at 6.30am and in bed by midnight and in between she does yoga, reformer Pilates, weight training, dance rehearsals. She looks after her body, she says, “like an athlete”, and thinks of her voice as a muscle. She has a singing coach as well as a speech therapist, to train her not to run her voice ragged by speaking in a raspy tone (“I love a chat”). When not on tour she’s in the studio with a producer and a fellow songwriter. She’s learning Spanish with a tutor three times a week, she reads (her friends get all their book recommendations from Dua) and when she is on tour she builds in time to explore cities and new restaurants. She loves to cook – even when just off a plane she makes pesto from scratch, not from a jar – and she eats healthily (“I never try and restrict myself from anything”). She looks after her skin, diligently washing her face three times after taking off her make-up, and once a year she sees a facialist in New York. All this, of course, while embarking on several high-profile collaborations in the worlds of fashion and beauty. In the past she has worked on a collection of clothes for Versace, been a brand ambassador for Tiffany & Co, and is a face of YSL Beauty. Notably this year she is front and centre for Chanel, both at the house’s shows and in launching the Chanel 25 handbag this past spring.
Dua’s appetite for life can’t be contained within the span of an ordinary human day – she needs every minute she can get just to meet the demands of her own curiosity. Her friend Mia laughs about this: “Maybe – a theory – she can stop time?”
“She’s been organised her entire life,” Anesa reflects. “She’s ahead of everything. The rest of us have to keep up.”
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So what do Dua’s 30s hold for the Radical empire? “I think I’d love to expand Service95 and the book club,” she says. “I’d love to publish authors. I would love to help produce them into film and TV.” She recently executive produced a documentary about the music scene in Camden for Disney+, and would like to do more. She’s keen to see the music festival she set up in Kosovo grow. And at some point she wants to look after other musicians, “maybe have my own record label, maybe represent other artists”. Overall, she’s thinking: “How can I be of service, literally, to other artists, whether that be in film, TV, books, music?” You get the impression she doesn’t so much want to conquer the world as invite it to join her.
“Can you do all that?” I ask. She throws me an “are you kidding – I got this” look. “Yeah,” she says. “Nothing’s impossible. You’ve just got to get up and do it.”
Click here to read the full interview.
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Dua Lipa talks to Jennifer Clement about her book, Widow Basquiat, as part of the Service 95 book club.
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In addition to CBS Mornings, Dua Lipa appeared on KCAL News, CBS Chicago, WJZ, and more to talk about ‘An Evening with Dua Lipa,’ her special performance featuring a 53-piece orchestra at the Royal Albert Hall.
Dua Lipa appeared on CBS Mornings to talk about ‘An Evening with Dua Lipa,’ her special performance featuring a 53-piece orchestra at the Royal Albert Hall.
Dua Lipa was spotted outside The Late Show with Stephen Colbert last night, where she was a guest. Check out her interview clips below:
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Dua Lipa appears on Vogue’s In The Bag series to share what’s in her Hermès Birkin Bag, which includes Polaroids, books, manuka honey drops, an eye mask, headphones, tarot cards, and so much more.
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Dua Lipa sat down with American Express to share the story of her hit single, ‘Houdini.’ Dua breaks down the writing process, meaning behind the lyrics, and the music video. Check it out below:
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Dua Lipa recently spoke to Paper Magazine about YSL Beauty and her upcoming world tour. You can read the interview below or on papermag.com.
What does it mean for you to be the new face of YSL Beauty?
It’s a big honor, and actually a 360 dream that kind of happened. When I was younger, a friend of mine and her mom took me to Paris for a weekend, and they were going to all these shops and buying all these fancy things. I felt a little bit left out, so I went to Sephora, and the first thing that I bought was YSL [Beauty] lipstick. I was like, I feel so chic. It was my first designer thing. I was very excited about it. Now getting to be able to be the face of the fragrance is such a big dream come true, especially because it was just started. I was starting fresh with the team, and then to join into the makeup side of things, I felt like was a big, full circle moment.
It’s crazy to have those moments of being like, “Oh my god! This is where I am now.”
I have pincher moments very often. And working with YSL Beauty is definitely one of those.
Are you excited for your upcoming tour?
I start in Asia in November, and then I go full out from March next year. I’m really excited. It’s gonna keep evolving and changing, and the show is longer than anything else I’ve done, so I want to make it exciting for everyone coming to see the shows, and everyone on tour as well. It’s not the same thing night after night, and we want to just keep it really flowing and have fun with it. I’m ready to get back on tour.
Is there anything you’re specifically looking forward to showing the world live?
Definitely the choreo. I love the building of the show and how it evolves and the kind of story that we want to tell. For me, it’s just how much fun can we have in two hours, you know? How many things can we fill it up with that just keeps you dancing all the way through? I’m a big high energy person, and that’s how I want everyone to experience the show. I’m ready to go nuts, basically.
If you’re having fun and your whole team’s having fun, then the whole audience will see that and have fun, too, right?
Definitely. It’s such a back and forth of energy. What we give, we also get back, and then that hypes us up even more and amps us to high levels of energy. By the end of it, we all look like drowned rats. That’s when you know you’ve had a really good show, when you’re just completely drenched.
What did Radical Optimism mean to you both personally and in terms of your career as a whole?
This album opened a lot of doors for me. It also taught me how to be a better songwriter, how to dig deeper. I really felt like I knew exactly what I wanted from myself as an artist, and I’m really proud of all the opportunities that I’ve had with this album and what I’ve been able to do with it. The opportunity to be able to experiment and explore and try something new has been really special. So I’m excited to give it some new life on the road.
It seems like an album that’ll be a completely different experience to hear it in real life, just because it’s so joyful and celebratory.
Musically and sonically, it’s crafted in a way that is actually quite complex, and bringing all those sounds to to life, you’ll feel the record in a different way, in the way that it’s actually intended to be. My whole idea for Radical Optimism was the organic-ness of it and the live instrumentation, so it’s going to lend itself really well to the tour.
Since you’re the face of the new YSL Beauty Libre Flowers & Flames fragrance, let’s do some fun, rapid fire questions about your scent memories. First, what does Radical Optimism smell like?
When I think about what it smells like, I think back to when we shot the cover. That was in Ibiza. So I want to say it’s hot and citrusy and light and summery. Those are the tones, the scents of it.
What does heartbreak smell like?
Tequila.
What does happiness smell like?
The smell of clean bedsheets. That’s very joyful to me.
What does your home smell like?
It’s cozy. It has woody, lemony, kind of earthy smells.
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Dua Lipa talks to iHeartRadio about preparing for the Radical Optimism Tour, including how she builds her setlists and more. Watch below:
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