Daisy Ridley cut a chic figure in a cream dress as she attended a Wednesday photocall during the 50th American Film Festival, held in France.
The English actress, 32, flaunted her legs in the elegant mini dress as she attended the Beauville event.
Daisy’s dress was jazzed up by a large gold safety pin and she finished her look with a white pair of court shoes.
She accessorised with gold earrings and gold rings and smiled as the wind swept her hair around.
The Deauville American Film Festival began in 1975 and, despite not being competitive to begin with, the Festival began to award prizes for feature films in 1995 and short films in 1998.
Daisy Ridley, 32, cut a chic figure in a cream dress as she attended a Wednesday photocall during the 50th American Film Festival, held in France
The English actress flaunted her legs in the elegant mini dress as she attended the Beauville event
Despite not being competitive to begin with, the Festival began to award prizes for feature films in 1995 and short films in 1998
Daisy has two films in post-production: We Bury The Dead and Cleaner.
We Bury The Dead is a Australian-American survival thriller and it will premiere at the Adelaide Film Festival in November.
Cleaner is a British action thriller also starring Clive Owen and Netflix’s One Piece’s Taz Skylar.
In August, Daisy revealed she has been diagnosed with Graves’ disease.
The actress opened up about the autoimmune disorder for the first time during an interview with Women’s Health magazine, in which she told how she mistakenly blamed her symptoms on a ‘really stressful’ film role.
Graves’ disease results in your immune system producing antibodies that cause the thyroid to produce too much thyroid hormone, according to the NHS.
The cause of Graves’ disease is unknown, but it mostly affects young to middle-aged women and is often hereditary.
Daisy suffered from symptoms including hot flashes and fatigue following the filming of her psychological thriller Magpie, and she headed to her GP.
Daisy’s dress was jazzed up by a large gold safety pin and she finished her look with a white pair of court shoes
She accessorised with gold earrings and gold rings and smiled as the wind swept her hair around
Daisy has two films in post-production: American-Australian survival thriller We Bury The Dead and British action thriller Cleaner
In August, Daisy revealed she has been diagnosed with Graves’ disease
The Star Wars actress recalled: ‘I thought: “Well, I’ve just played a really stressful role; presumably that’s why I feel poorly.”‘
However, she was then urged to see an endocrinologist [a medical practitioner who treats patients with hormone-related diseases], who later informed her that her symptoms can sometimes referred to as ‘tired but wired’.
The star had struggled with symptoms that included hand tremors, racing heart rate, weight loss and fatigue.
After being made aware of what could be happening to her, Daisy had a moment of realisation, noting: ‘It was funny, I was like, “Oh, I just thought I was annoyed at the world,” but turns out everything is functioning so quickly, you can’t chill out.’
But while the Young Woman and the Sea star felt sad over her health condition, she also felt some frustration seeing as she was someone who physically took good care of herself.
Despite this, Daisy embarked on some lifestyle changes to help her manage the disease, including eating a mindful diet which she’s ‘not super strict about’ and practicing self-care including exercise to ‘make myself feel good.’
After implementing these changes, the beauty explained that she found herself feeling better and more aware of life around her, noting: that she ‘didn’t realize how bad I felt before.’
Daisy shared that she’s continuing to learn how to listen to her body, something that many women bare not inclined to do.
Daisy previously opened up about how her career success affected her health after she shot to fame with her starring role in the Star Wars franchise
She said: ‘We all read the stats about women being undiagnosed or underdiagnosed and sort of coming to terms with saying: “I really, actually don’t feel good” and not going: “I’m fine, I’m fine, I’m fine, I’m fine.” It’s just normalised to not feel good.’
This isn’t the first time Daisy has spoken out about her health battles.
Daisy opened up about how her career success affected her health after she shot to fame with her starring role in the Star Wars franchise.
She made her big screen debut in 2015 when she portrayed Rey in Star Wars: The Force Awakens.