Parties

Miley Cyrus, Parker Posey, and Riley Keough Toast Future Filmmakers With Chanel and Tribeca

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Parker Posey, Miley Cyrus and Tish Cyrus
Dimitrios Kambouris

“Programs like this are so necessary,” echoed Riley Keough, dressed in an embroidered jacket from the Métiers d’art 2024/25 collection and relaxed denim. Keough, along with creative partner Gina Gammell, is preparing to debut her latest project In Process during the festival. “We conceived it through the Through Her Lens program as a way to showcase different female artists—a director, an actor, and myself as an author. It was so beautiful getting to watch these women at work,” she said.

Lucy Liu, another alumna-turned-power-producer, also has a premiere this year: her long-awaited film Rosemead. “We’ve had it in the vault for so long—almost ten years,” Liu shared. “I can’t wait for the [immigrant] community to see it. They’re why we made this movie.”

In the sun-drenched garden, conversation buzzed around upcoming screenings and new voices to watch. AnnaSophia Robb spoke excitedly about Jean Jacket, a 13-minute short she starred in and produced. Francesca Scorsese beamed as she shared details about her two festival entries, Fame and Other Four Letter Words and Money Talks. Mariska Hargitay, meanwhile, was on hand ahead of the North American premiere of her new documentary My Mom Jayne, about her mother Jayne Mansfield.

Everywhere, business cards and ideas were exchanged. “Fifteen percent is a dismal number,” Patty Jenkins said, “but when I look around this room, I’m reminded of how many women are actively shifting the culture.”

“It’s keeping the door open that’s the hard part,” added composer Laura Karpman. “Ladies, we need a battering ram—and this program is the battering ram.”