There are red carpets, and then there are moments that reshape an entire press tour.
Zendaya has spent much of 2026 moving seamlessly between blockbuster franchises, but her arrival at the London world premiere of Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey signalled the beginning of what may become the defining campaign of her career. Draped in a sculptural Schiaparelli couture creation inspired by classical marble statues, the actress stepped onto the carpet not simply promoting a film, but fully inhabiting Athena, the Greek goddess of wisdom and war.
It was the latest chapter in a meticulously curated press tour that has blurred the line between fashion and storytelling.
Christopher Nolan’s adaptation of Homer’s ancient epic opens globally on 17 July, with an ensemble cast led by Matt Damon as Odysseus, Anne Hathaway as Penelope, Tom Holland as Telemachus and Zendaya as Athena. The film also stars Charlize Theron, Lupita Nyong’o, Robert Pattinson, Jon Bernthal and Benny Safdie, making it one of the year’s most anticipated releases.
Yet, in a twist worthy of a Nolan screenplay, Zendaya almost never saw her casting coming.


Speaking on the Happy Sad Confused podcast during the film’s promotional campaign, the actress revealed that she had no idea Christopher Nolan was considering her for the role until Holland returned home after his own meeting with the director. Having already been cast as Telemachus, Holland handed Zendaya the screenplay and encouraged her to reread Athena’s scenes. Only then did she realise Nolan wanted her for one of Greek mythology’s most iconic figures.
Holland later explained that Nolan personally asked whether he would mind if Zendaya were offered the role. His response was immediate. There was never a question. Instead, he was grateful to be the person who could tell his wife that she had the opportunity to work with the filmmaker behind Interstellar — a film Zendaya has repeatedly described as one of her favourites.
The behind-the-scenes stories have become almost as compelling as the mythology itself.



During another interview, Zendaya laughed about her first day filming in Iceland, recalling that the freezing temperatures left her unable to deliver her opening lines properly because the cold had quite literally frozen her mouth. Holland admitted he had his own first-day anxieties, initially believing Nolan was unimpressed with his performance before discovering the director’s famously economical shooting style simply allows only a few minutes per IMAX film cartridge before cameras must be reloaded.
Meanwhile, Law Roach has transformed every premiere into an extension of Athena’s world.
Rather than relying on obvious costume references, the stylist has embraced what fashion observers call “method dressing.” In New York, Zendaya wore fluid ivory draping by Khaite that echoed the silhouette of an ancient Greek peplos. In London, she changed into a custom Jacquemus design paired with striking gold jewellery and a headscarf before unveiling what quickly became the press tour’s standout look: a Schiaparelli couture gown featuring a porcelain-like sculpted bodice reminiscent of classical marble sculptures.
The strategy has reinforced what has become one of Hollywood’s most reliable partnerships. When Zendaya appears on a carpet, audiences now expect narrative as much as couture.




Early reactions suggest Nolan may have another critical success on his hands.
Following the first press screenings in London, critics praised the film’s scale and ambition. The Guardian‘s Peter Bradshaw described The Odyssey as a sweeping origin-myth story of postwar disillusion. An IndieWire critic wrote that the director’s IMAX epic met exceptionally high expectations, predicting Matt Damon could emerge as a serious Best Actor contender while suggesting multiple supporting performances may enter the awards conversation. Other early viewers praised the film’s emotional final act, describing it as a meditation on hubris, divine consequence and redemption that rewards its lengthy journey.
For Zendaya, however, The Odyssey represents more than another blockbuster credit.
It marks her first collaboration with Christopher Nolan, places her at the center of one of cinema’s most ambitious literary adaptations, and continues a remarkable career trajectory that has already seen her dominate prestige television, auteur cinema, franchise filmmaking, and high fashion in equal measure.
Athena may be the goddess of strategy, but this casting increasingly looks like one of the smartest career moves Hollywood has seen all year.





