Lana is featured on the cover of Glamour Mexico for February 2021! I’ve added the cover and a few photos to the gallery. There’s also a video below.
Photoshoots & Portraits > 2021 > Glamour Mexico (2021)
What was making this last film like for you?
I remember thinking, “How did I get here?” I wanted nothing more than to finish it the way that I would be super proud of Lara Jean. So I was just hellbent; I was constantly talking to the director and the producers and writers and everyone like, “You guys, we need to show her stepping into the world as a young woman choosing herself for the first time.”
It was a crazy emotional experience, because the last few years have been the greatest ups and the greatest downs of my life. [She has said she felt burned out after the first film.] I love the movies, the friends I made in the movies, the story — I love the color scheme of our movies, the pinks and the teals. So knowing it’s the last time I’ll be in the bedroom, the last time I’ll be in the school, all these things that I’ve been spending so much time in in the past three years, is emotional. I’m going to miss it a lot.
Source: The New York Times | Read More
To All The Boys: Always & Forever is out on Netflix today! I had a chance to watch and it was such a sweet movie and I wonderful end to the series. I’ve added thousands of HD screencaptures to the gallery. I’ve also added more HQ stills. Enjoy!
Lana has been featured in and on the cover of the February 2021 issue of Self Magazine! In it, she talks about her struggles with mental health and body dysmorphia, as well as saying goodbye to her TATB character Lara Jean. It’s such a lovely and very vulnerable piece, and I highly recommend reading it and watching the feature video.
In the gallery, I’ve added the photoshoot, magazine cover, and screen captures from the video. Enjoy!
“I was on the phone with my team and I had this moment where I just was in tears, telling them that I don’t feel okay. And they were all shocked because I wasn’t open about my feelings,” she said. “No one knew. When I had that conversation with them, it was like a new beginning. Now I know the power of sharing that.” In addition to her team, Lana has leaned on her parents. “My mom and my dad are so supportive and we’ve had conversations about ‘Lana, you need to stop. You’re clearly unhappy’…’Okay, let’s figure out the root of that.’ My parents have been a great sounding board.”
Condor knows some people might dismiss her mental health struggles, chalking them up to “Champagne problems” given all the comforts that come with her success. But opening up in this way has been monumental for her.
“I’m talking about my mental health and my heart. And that’s something that I completely threw away for the sake of others. So once I shared it and was vulnerable with my team, it was a huge change,” Condor said. “They really have helped me navigate the industry now in a much more healthy way, where I feel like I can do what I love and also be the person that I want to be for myself.”
Source: Self.com | Read more
Lana has been featured in Vogue Singapore! This is her very first shoot for Vogue and it came out so beautifully. There is also an article, where she talks about saying goodbye to the To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before series.
At just 23 years old, the Asian-American actress has achieved the kind of fame that would take most people a lifetime to attain. Since taking on the role of Lara Jean Covey in 2018, Condor has exploded in popularity. It’s hard to pinpoint, but there’s something about her earnestness and sincerity on screen that draws audiences closer to her.
But this February marks a turning point in the young actress’s life as the franchise finally comes to a close. “I have a lot of mixed feelings,” Condor says. “It was such an emotional experience because To All the Boys has been such a huge part of my life. It’s been so formative for me as a young adult.”
We’re chatting on Zoom almost one year after my set visit to Seoul, but the feelings and memories of wrapping the film are still vivid for the actress. “There’s a lot of me that I put into the character and it has defined so much of who I am as a young adult,” she muses. “And so saying goodbye to that chapter in my life feels monumental, like something that I’m not quite ready to do.”
Source: Vogue Singapore | read more