Olivia Rodrigo just cut her signature waist-skimming waves. “I feel like a brand new girl,” she tells me over the phone. “I had really long hair while on tour and it was hard to take care of. I wanted to shed the dead ends so I chopped them off. It’s time for new beginnings.”
The chop (which the mega-star follows up with “it is not a bob!”) isn’t just symbolic of a fresh start music-wise—freeing herself from the emotions tied to a 60-city, 20-country world tour!—but also perfectly timed with today’s news: Rodrigo is officially the global brand ambassador of French makeup, fragrance, and skin-care brand Lancôme.
“I remember rifling through my mom’s makeup bag and seeing Lancôme skin care in there,” the 21-year-old says. “The serum was one of the first things I put on my face, before I really was doing skin care.” These days, she’s partial to L’Absolue Rouge Cream in shade Caprice de Rouge—a slightly deep, fiery red—and Idôle Liquid Eyeliner to get the signature look she rocked throughout her Guts Tour. She’s wearing both of these products, plus the Teint Idôle Ultra Wear Foundation in shade 345N, for the new campaign dropping today. “I know it’s weird, but I’m really excited to take a picture of the campaign in the airport. It will be such a wild moment.”
It’s only been three years since Rodrigo’s first (of many) hits “Drivers License” captivated the world, and in the time since she’s released two studio albums, won three Grammys, and been named Time’s “Entertainer of the Year,” just to start. The morning we talk, it’s the day after she’s walked the red carpet for Netflix’s Olivia Rodrigo: Guts World Tour Los Angeles. Throughout it all, she’s working hard to stay grounded.
“I do all the classic things,” Rodrigo says of how she takes care of herself while on tour. “Call my therapist, go to the gym, I eat really healthy, and I don’t drink. But being creative is the ultimate form of self-care for me.” That includes working on a new song, getting up on stage to sing along with millions of fans, or writing for an audience of one in her journal. “I could journal forever. Putting down all the random stuff that comes into my head. Or if I’m feeling anxious, I’ll make a list of all the things I’m grateful for. I find that journaling is always the antidote.”
This article was originally published on Vogue.com.