Fashion

All the Stars Who Attended the Louis Vuitton Cruise 2027 Show

Zendaya! Anne Hathaway! Emma Stone! The list goes on.

By Elliot O·May 21, 2026·2 min read
All the Stars Who Attended the Louis Vuitton Cruise 2027 Show

Reported by Harper's Bazaar.

Louis Vuitton didn't just stage a cruise show — it staged a cultural event. The house's Cruise 2027 presentation drew what amounted to a master class in front-row power, assembling an edit of talent so deliberately curated it functioned almost as a brand statement on its own.

According to Harper's Bazaar, the guest list read like someone had raided every corner of the cultural conversation at once: Zendaya, Cate Blanchett, Emma Stone, Emily Blunt, Anne Hathaway, Amy Adams — five Oscar winners and one of the most awarded actresses alive, all under one roof. That's not coincidence. That's choreography.

Beyond the A-List

What made the lineup interesting wasn't just the marquee names — it was the texture around them. Misty Copeland and Ava DuVernay brought artistic and directorial weight. HoYeon Jung and Alicia Vikander extended the house's global reach. Hannah Einbinder, Madeline Argy, Chase Infiniti and Iris Law signaled a deliberate push toward a younger, more internet-native audience — the kind of women who don't just watch fashion, they translate it. Chloë Sevigny added a downtown credibility that money genuinely cannot manufacture, and Danielle and Este Haim arrived doing exactly what the Haims always do: making everything feel cooler just by showing up.

Japanese rapper Awich and ballerina-turned-cultural-icon Copeland rounded out an international roster that signals where Nicolas Ghesquière — and Vuitton — sees its woman in 2027: global, genre-fluid, and impossible to reduce to a single demographic. This wasn't a celebrity grab bag. The curation was pointed.

Cruise collections exist in a particular commercial sweet spot — they're the clothes that actually sell, the ones that sit in stores longest and travel the furthest. So who shows up to watch them matters. When you stack your front row with the most recognizable women on the planet — women whose wardrobes are studied, dissected, and shopped — you're not just throwing a party. You're building a visual argument for who belongs in your clothes.

The real flex isn't the guest list itself — it's that every woman on it looked like she chose to be there.


Read the original at Harper's Bazaar.

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