Penélope Cruz! Olandria! Demi Moore! And now, Margot Robbie! All rocking 2026's newest resurgent trend – the blunt bob.
Fresh off the Wuthering Heights promotional trail, the Australian actress and producer, 35, arrived at Paris Fashion Week for Matthieu Blazy's latest Chanel Women's RTW Fall/Winter show.
For the display of the 2026-27 collection, Margot arrived in peak chic-casual, opting for semi-sheer light denim cigarette pants with a see-through off-white blouse with a nude lacy bra underneath.
However, the real star of the show was her hair, abandoning her long Cathy Earnshaw locks for a chopped and tousled perfectly Parisian bob, paired with wispy curtain bangs that framed her face.
She was styled for the occasion by her usual partner-in-crime Andrew Mukamal, with her hair done by celebrity hairstylist Bryce Scarlett. Her makeup artist Pati Dubroff shared some snippets of the look on Instagram.
Immediately, fans were enthralled, responding to Pati's photos with comments like: "Perfect cut for her bone structure. Gorgeous!" and: "Divine with any hairstyle!" as well as: "She's absolutely gorgeous."
Outside of awards season and press tours for her projects, Margot keeps her public appearances in recent years to more of a minimum, save for the occasional fashion show as a Chanel girl (this time joining others like Jennie Kim, Olivia Dean and Oprah Winfrey).
She explained recently during a conversation with British Vogue that it was all in an effort to give herself and her family more privacy, especially after welcoming her son with husband Tom Ackerley in October 2024.
"I'm trying to keep that side of things private and protect him," she told the publication of maintaining a more discreet side in interviews as well. "Earlier in my career, I'd speak more freely in interviews."
"I've just been burnt so many times, when people have taken what I've said out of context. And I read stuff all the time where people put me in quotation marks saying things I've never said."
The Barbie star added: "I remember the first time, 10 years ago, seeing that in a newspaper and I could not get my head around it. I was like, 'They just made it up?' There was no way for me to change or control it. I just had to accept that. When you shift from your 20s to your 30s and beyond, you think, 'I am going to do things differently. Here are my new boundaries.'"
One reason she did outline people will see more of her, though? A desire to go from the front of the camera to behind it and take up directing. "That's kind of where my focus is shifting to," the Oscar-nominated producer noted.
"I've wanted to direct for 10 years. I haven't rushed into it, but I feel like it's getting closer to that time when I'm ready to dive into that."








