Rihanna, Daisy Edgar-Jones and Emily Maitlis among ‘most powerful women’ on Vogue list

List also features Florence Pugh and Jennie Harris

Olivia Petter
Friday 07 August 2020 05:03 EDT
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(Getty Images)

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Rihanna and Daisy Edgar-Jones are among the 25 women included in British Vogue‘s annual Power List.

The publication explains that the list is about highlighting “the women of the moment who are leading us through 2020 with prescience, power and poise”.

This year, the Power List has a focus on how priorities have shifted during the pandemic, as have the women in the spotlight.

The list includes authors, actors, politicians and activists of all ages.

The Queen is also included in the list, with Vogue stating that the coronavirus has “deepened” her relevance.

Additionally, actor and writer Michaela Coel features on the list. Coel was lauded earlier this year for her BBC series, I May Destroy You, which was inspired by her own experience of being sexually assaulted.

Two Black Lives Matter activists are included on the list: Liza Bilal and Naomi Smith, in addition to June Sarpong, who is the director of creative diversity at the BBC.

The novelist Bernadine Evaristo, who was the co-winner of this year’s Booker Prize for her novel Girl, Woman, Other, also features on the list.

You can see the full list, which is not ranked, below.

  • Anne Mensah, vice president of original series, Netflix
  • Asma Khan, chef
  • Bernardine Evaristo, novelist
  • Caroline Rush, chief executive of the British Fashion Council
  • Charlotte Tilbury, beauty innovator
  • Daisy Edgar-Jones, actor
  • Dawn Butler, Labour MP
  • Dr Jenny Harries, deputy chief medical officer
  • Emily Maitlis, broadcaster
  • Emma Revie, chief executive of The Trussell Trust
  • Florence Pugh, actor
  • Frances O’Grady, general secretary of the Trades Union Congress
  • June Sarpong, director of creativity diversity at the BBC
  • Liza Bilal & Naomi Smith, Black Lives Matter activists
  • Maria Balshaw, director ofTate
  • Michaela Coel, writer and actor
  • Munroe Bergdorf, model and activist
  • Nicole Jacobs, domestic abuse commissioner
  • Pippa Crerar, journalist
  • Prof Sarah Gilbert, vaccinologist
  • Rihanna, businesswoman
  • Rosh Mahtani, designer
  • Silvana Tenreyro, economist
  • Steph Houghton, footballer
  • The Queen

The release of Vogue‘s Power List is part of the magazine’s activism issue, which is fronted by Marcus Rashford.

The Manchester United striker prompted a government U-turn after writing an open letter on the granting of free food vouchers for the poorest British families over the summer.

Rashford poses on the cover alongside model and mental health campaigner Adwoa Aboah as photographed by Misan Harriman, who is the first black male photographer to shoot any cover of British Vogue in the publication’s 104-year history.

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