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untung99.art: Olivia Rodrigo on Overnight Fame FreeBritney and the Therapy of Depressing Songs


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Rodrigo is now suspended between getting preposterously famous during lockdown and being able to actually tour. Discounting the whole “global pop star who gets invited to the White House” bit, her summer is playing out much like many high school graduates’, in that hazy, liminal stretch of months before they embark into the real world. She’s planning to take her first vacation with friends in a while. She can finally read for pleasure rather than for schoolwork, so she started The Alchemist, Paulo Coelho’s mystical allegorical novel about a young shepherd boy who follows his dreams, because her friends are “obsessed” with it. Dating, Rodrigo says, is less of a priority. “I had Raya for a second, and it was so vomit. Like, I could not,” she tells me. (Later that week, photos of her with the producer Adam Faze would surface.)

“I’m so happy for the first time in so long, I just don’t want to fuck with it, you know what I mean?” she says. “I just love my girlfriends and love my job and am exactly where I’ve always wanted to be. Everything else is just icing on the cake.”

I write this well aware that I can feel the wrinkles on my face forming and a handful of Werther’s Originals spontaneously appearing in my pocket, but Rodrigo has what would traditionally be called a good head on her shoulders. Take, for instance, her reply when I ask her about how she balances her various public identities.

“Something that I learned very early on is the importance of separating person versus persona. When people who don’t know me are criticizing me, they’re criticizing my persona, not my person,” she tells me. “But that’s really difficult, though, too, because my persona is being as genuine and honest as I possibly can, so it’s this weird dichotomy.”

She’s landed on a good solution for now. “It helps to not look at that shit,” Rodrigo says. “That shit” would be social media—a friend of hers set up a child lock on her phone a while back and then forgot the password. As a result, Rodrigo can log in to the apps for a maximum of only 30 minutes a day. “Which is honestly the biggest blessing,” she says. “You’re literally not meant to know what everyone is saying about you at all times.”

Gabriella Paiella is a GQ staff writer.

A version of this story originally appeared in the September 2021 issue with the title “Most Likely to Succeed.”


PRODUCTION CREDITS:
Photographs by Adrienne Raquel
Styled by Rebecca Ramsey
Hair by Clayton Hawkins using Tangle Teezer
Makeup by Molly Greenwald using Glossier
Manicure by Tom Bachik for A-Frame Agency
Tailoring by Irina Tshartaryan for Susie’s Custom Designs, Inc.
Set design by Francis Cardinale
Produced by Tsuruda Studio