Emma Watson Makes a Rare Appearance at Beyoncé’s Oscar Party in a Flowy White Look

Estimated read time2 min read

THE RUNDOWN

  • Emma Watson attended Beyoncé and Jay-Z’s Oscar after-party, marking a rare event appearance for the star.
  • The actress was photographed arriving in a sleeveless white look.
  • Watson also attended Dior and W magazine’s pre-Oscar dinner last week.

Emma Watson made a rare public appearance at Dior and W magazine’s pre-Oscar dinner last Thursday. But the actress’s big week in L.A. didn’t stop there. While she was not photographed at the Vanity Fair Oscar Party, she was seen heading to Beyoncé and Jay-Z’s annual Gold Party after the Academy Awards. Watson opted for a flowy white sleeveless look, accessorizing with gold jewelry.

Emma Watson arriving at Beyoncé's Gold Party on Oscar night.

BACKGRID

At Dior’s event days earlier, Watson opted for a white tweed set from the fashion house:

Emma Watson at W Magazine and Dior's Intimate Dinner Ahead of the Academy Awards

Emma McIntyre//Getty Images

It’s been years since Watson made a high-profile appearance on Oscars night. She was last photographed at the Vanity Fair Oscar Party in 2018:

Emma Watson at the 2018 Vanity Fair Oscar Party

Toni Anne Barson//Getty Images

In September, the star spoke with Hollywood Authentic about whether she misses acting. (Her last film was 2019’s Little Women.)

“In some ways I really won the lottery [with acting], and what happened to me is so unusual,” she began. “But a bigger component than the actual job itself is the promotion and selling of that piece of work, this piece of art. The balance of that can get quite thrown off. I think I’ll be honest and straight-forward, and say: I do not miss selling things. I found that to be quite soul-destroying. But I do very much miss using my skill-set, and I very much miss the art. I just found I got to do so little of the bit that I actually enjoyed. The moment you get on a film set, you don’t get very long for rehearsal. But the moment you get to talk through a scene—or I got to prepare and think about how I wanted to do something—and then the minute the camera rolls, and getting to just completely forget about everything else in the world other than that one moment—it’s such an intense form of meditation. Because you just cannot be anywhere else. It’s so freeing. I miss that profoundly. But I don’t miss the pressure. I forgot it was a lot of pressure. I did a small thing for a play, just with my friends. I was like, ‘Bloody hell, this is stressful!’ And that wasn’t even for a real public audience or anything. I don’t miss that.”

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