Elizabeth Debicki stood beside her decidedly shorter co-star Lily Collins at the Hollywood premiere of their slasher film MaXXXine in Hollywood on Monday.
The Australian actress, who stands at 6ft 3in, towered over her fellow actress, who is almost a foot shorter than her at 5ft 4in at the screening.
Elizabeth commanded attention in a sparkly champagne co-ord at the TCL Chinese Theatre and then Chateau Marmont for the afterparty.
The star, best known for portraying Princess Diana in The Crown, added to her height with a pair of strappy gold high heels.
Lily, 35, went braless in a powder blue skirt suit, distracting from her bare chest with stunning Egyptian-inspired gold jewellery.
Elizabeth Debicki stood beside her decidedly shorter co-star Lily Collins at the Hollywood premiere of their slasher film MaXXXine in Hollywood on Monday
The Australian actress, who stands at 6ft 3in, towered over her fellow actress, who is almost a foot shorter than her at 5ft 4in at the screening
Elizabeth, best known for portraying Princess Diana in The Crown, added to her height with a pair of strappy gold high heels
She wore a toga-style skirt and flashed more skin with bare legs, finishing her look with silver high heels.
Golden Globe winner Elizabeth stars in the third film in the X slasher franchise as The Puritan II director Elizabeth Bender.
Mia Goth returns as Maxine Minx to lead the horror film, which also stars Halsey and Kevin Bacon.
Set in Los Angeles in 1985, MaXXXine follows fame-hungry, cocaine-snorting massacre survivor Maxine continuing to follow her dream of becoming a famous actress.
But while also being on the run from her televangelist father, Maxine is targeted by the Night Stalker serial killer.
Elizabeth shared the role of Princess Diana in the Netflix smash hit The Crown with English actor Emma Corrin.
The actors revealed earlier in June that they both originally auditioned for guest roles on the acclaimed drama.
Elizabeth portrayed the late Princess of Wales in the fifth and sixth series, while Emma, 28, played her in the fourth.
Both stars won numerous accolades for their portrayals, including Golden Globe and Critics Choice Awards.
Uniting for Variety’s Actors on Actors series this month, Elizabeth detailed how she had given up on playing Diana after Emma had landed the role.
She said: ‘Maybe we’re better at acting when we’re not trying. I went to do this audition because season one had just aired and it was huge… It was so lush.
Emily In Paris star Lily distracted from her bare chest with stunning Egyptian-inspired gold jewellery
She wore a toga-style skirt and flashed more skin with bare legs, finishing her look with silver high heels
Golden Globe winner Elizabeth stars in the third film in the X slasher franchise as The Puritan II director Elizabeth Bender
Mia Goth (centre) returns as Maxine Minx to lead the horror film, which also stars Halsey and Kevin Bacon (pictured)
The Golden Globe winner stars in the third film in the X slasher franchise as The Puritan II director Elizabeth Bender (pictured)
Elizabeth shared the role of Princess Diana in the Netflix smash hit The Crown with English actor Emma Corrin
Elizabeth portrayed the late Princess of Wales in the fifth and sixth series (pictured in the show) while Emma portrayed her in the fourth
‘To be frank, the amount of money that was on the screen was extraordinary. It was sort of at the dawn of television becoming this Golden Age—especially Netflix.
‘I don’t know when House of Cards came out—my 20s are a blur. But I went in for the Season 2 part, and I got an email a few days later from my agent saying, “Not that part, but we are thinking…”
‘I guess they must have felt something Diana in it, which is hilarious because I wasn’t playing an English person even.
‘The funny thing is, for five or six years, I continued to watch ‘The Crown’ religiously, and I would think, “I wonder if that’s ever going to come around.” And when you were cast, I thought, “Well, it was a nice dream.”
The Aussie star admitted that she initially had ‘anxiety’ over mastering the Royal’s distinctive voice.
She said: ‘What you as the actor playing that character owe the audience is a very specific sonic imprint.
‘I felt a huge responsibility to get as close to it as I could. I’ve lived in London a long time, so my Australian accent is kind of transmorphed anyway.
‘But of all the accents I’ve ever learned to do…For Diana, it felt like a music. And that music and that rhythm was so far from how I sense myself as a person. So I worked extremely hard.’
The actors revealed earlier in June that they both originally auditioned for guest roles on the acclaimed drama