Jet lag may have been part of the journey, but you would never have guessed it from the way Alia Bhatt moved across the BAFTAs red carpet — unhurried, luminous, entirely at ease. Making her first appearance at the British Academy Film Awards, the actor arrived with the quiet confidence of someone who understands the theatre of fashion as instinctively as she understands the camera.
There was something unmistakably classic about her look. Not nostalgic, not costume — but considered. A silhouette that skimmed rather than clung. A palette that shimmered without shouting. The kind of glamour that doesn’t compete for attention, it simply holds it.“I wanted to bring the glam,” she shared in conversation with vogue before the ceremony, “but I didn’t want it to feel loud. I wanted it to feel… cinematic.”
For Bhatt, who has long balanced blockbuster stardom with international ambition, the evening marked more than a red-carpet moment. It was about presence. About representing Indian cinema on a global stage while embracing a new chapter of visibility. There was pride in that — subtle but unmistakable.
What made it especially striking was its quiet nod to Marilyn Monroe. Not a costume, not a replica, but a mood. The delicate sparkle evoked the legendary silver-screen gowns that seemed poured onto Monroe’s frame, catching the flashbulbs like stardust. There was the same balance of softness and sensuality — an interplay between innocence and allure that defined an era.
The neckline framed the shoulders with a subtle drama, while the open back introduced a whisper of boldness — that Old Hollywood confidence where elegance and risk coexisted beautifully. And then there was the wrap: plush, tactile, and indulgent, draped over her arms in a way that instantly conjured images of Monroe stepping out into the cool night air, all fur and flash photography.
Even the texture of the fabric felt intentional. Layers of embellishment created depth rather than glare, producing a glow instead of a shine — the difference between sparkle and radiance. It moved lightly, almost weightlessly, echoing that iconic Monroe quality of appearing both grounded and ethereal at once.
The overall effect wasn’t theatrical; it was cinematic. You could imagine it in black and white, the sequins translating into liquid mercury under soft lighting. It was less about modern red-carpet maximalism and more about a studied restraint — glamour pared back to its most powerful elements.
In choosing a look that so clearly nodded to Marilyn Monroe, Bhatt embraced an archetype of femininity that is enduring precisely because it refuses to fade. It wasn’t nostalgia for nostalgia’s sake. It was a reminder that true glamour — the kind Monroe embodied is less about volume and more about presence.
And on that red carpet, in silver and softness, the presence was undeniable.
Anjali Sharma







