What would you ask the British star of film and TV and patron saint of safety pins?

Elizabeth Hurley has spent the past three decades tirelessly making British culture a little bit more glamorous. She rose to fame in the early 1990s, having made her feature debut in 1988’s Rowing with the Wind, a windswept Mary Shelley biopic with Hugh Grant as Lord Byron.

Hurley’s breakthrough came in the Wesley Snipes plane thriller Passenger 57 (1992), as a henchwoman disguised as a flight attendant, before taking the lead in 1995’s Mad Dogs and Englishmen, about an upper-class heroin addict who begins an affair with her motorbiking drugs courier.

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