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Margot Robbie Has An Eccentric Guest Role in This Off-the-Wall Series

The Big Picture

  • Margot Robbie’s diverse filmography cements her status as a Hollywood powerhouse, including her eccentric appearance in
    Dollface.
  • The Margot Robbie-produced
    Dollface
    explores female friendships with a quirky and hilarious twist.
  • The show stands out from the rest of the genre by tackling the complexities of adulthood and including elements of magical realism.



Margot Robbie is one of the biggest names in Hollywood, and her massive success with Barbie only cemented her status as a bona fide movie star. From Sharon Tate to Tonya Harding, if Robbie’s name is attached to a film, you can be sure it’ll be a critical and commercial success. Robbie got her start on the Australian soap opera Neighbours when she was just a teenager, though she hasn’t acted on the small screen since her role in the short-lived drama series Pan Am in 2011. However, her production company LuckyChap Entertainment has produced the Netflix miniseries Maidthe Hulu miniseries Mikeand the Hulu comedy series Dollface. And in Dollface, Robbie makes a brief one-episode cameo as the eccentric spiritual guide Imelda. Dollface stars Kat Dennings as Jules, a young woman reconnecting with her female friends after a sudden breakup with her long-term boyfriend. Its familiar premise with a quirky and surreal twist makes Dollface worth a watch for fans of shows about female friendships and adult coming-of-age stories.


Dollface TV Show Poster

Dollface

Release Date
November 15, 2019

Main Genre
Comedy

Seasons
2


What Is ‘Dollface’ About?

Dollface follows in the footsteps of shows like Sex and the City and Girls in that it centers on a group of four female friends, but there’s plenty that makes it stand out from its predecessors. Instead of focusing on an already established group of friends, Dollface follows protagonist Jules as she reconnects with her female friends after her boyfriend of five years dumps her seemingly out of nowhere. First, she rekindles her friendship with her college friends Madison (Brenda Song) and Stella (Shay Mitchell), then befriends her coworker Izzy (Esther Povitsky), who’s desperate to find a new female friend group of her own. Instead of New York City, Dollface takes place in Los Angeles and often pokes fun at LA stereotypes. For example, Jules and Izzy work for Woöm, a women’s wellness company à la Gwyneth Paltrow’s Goop, spearheaded by their wealthy, enigmatic CEO Celeste (Malin Åkerman).


Jules is a socially awkward homebody, unsatisfied with her work and struggling to find and maintain female friendships, but when she reconnects with her best friend, the ambitious, no-nonsense Madison, her life changes for the better. Stella, her other friend from college, is confident, free-spirited, and unpredictable. Meanwhile, Izzy, Jules’ new friend from work, is quirky and, at times, off-putting, desperate to be accepted into their friend group. Along with its cast of lovable yet flawed characters, Dollface also features guest stars like Matthew Gray Gubler, Macaulay Culkinand, of course, Margot Robbie.

Who Does Margot Robbie Play in ‘Dollface’?

Margot Robbie with voluminous curly hair and coke bottle glasses in her one episode cameo on Hulu's Dollface.
Image via Hulu


In Season 1, Episode 8, “Mama Bear,” Jules and Izzy attend Woöm’s yearly wellness retreat at Celeste’s Malibu home, led by eccentric spiritual guide Imelda, played by Robbie. In her brief cameo as Imelda, Robbie channels Harry Potter‘s Professor Trelawney with her wild curly hair and coke bottle glasses as she leads the women in peculiar wellness exercises like goat yoga and energy readings. We’ve seen Robbie play everyone from Tonya Harding to Queen Elizabeth Ibut her role in Dollface is unlike anything she’s done before, making for some hilarious interactions with Jules. Robbie gets to lean into comedy with Imelda’s exaggerated mannerisms and personality, but her involvement with Dollface extends far beyond this one-episode cameo.

With her production company, LuckyChap Entertainment, which she founded with her husband Tom Ackerly, Robbie has produced many female-led films, including I, Tonya, Promising Young Woman, Birds of Preyand Barbiewhich recently earned her a Best Picture Nomination. Alongside creator and producer Jordan WeissRobbie served as a producer for Dollfaceand according to a 2019 cast interview with Peopleshe was surprisingly hands-on during production. According to Dennings, who is also a producer for the show, Robbie approached her with the script for Dollfaceand in her words, “If Margot Robbie gives you a script, you just say yup, I’ll do it.”


‘Dollface’ Brought Something New to a Beloved Genre

There are many widely beloved shows centered on female friendships, but Dollface largely flew under the radar while it was airing. To make matters worse, a year after Dollface was canceled in 2022, Hulu pulled it from the platform entirely. Dollfacewhich began in 2019, arrived on the heels of Girlsone of the most famous shows about millennial women, which ended in 2017. Although both series explore millennial anxieties through the lives of a group of women navigating heartbreak, career stagnation, and messy relationships, Jules and her group of friends are less abrasive characters than Hannah (Lena Dunham) and co. from Girls. Dollface also touches on the difficulties of making and maintaining friends in adulthood and stresses the unique value of female friendships. As Jules puts her ex behind her and starts to reintegrate herself into the lives of her female friends, she struggles to adapt to the standards of femininity and the particular type of womanhood she encounters in Los Angeles. When Jules is still a fish out of water among other women, she has a bit of a “not like other girls” attitude but actively wants to change that and become part of a sisterhood. Dollface explores the nuances of female friendships, how friendships can dissipate when one friend gets overly involved with their significant other, and how they can be repaired. But what makes Dollface truly stand out among similar shows that came before it is its use of magical realism.


Dollface incorporates magical realism from the very first episode when Jules’ ex-boyfriend drops her off in a parking lot, where she’s then picked up by a pastel pink bus driven by a woman with the head of a cat, whom we come to know as Cat Lady. While Cat Lady, voiced by Beth Grantacts as the devil on Jules’ shoulder and a manifestation of her anxietiesit also reminds viewers that Dollface doesn’t take itself too seriously. When Cat Lady picks Jules up, the bus is bound for Female Friendship Station, and getting off before the stop would leave her stranded in either Rebound Town or “Guy’s Girl” wasteland. This recurring character only scratches the surface of the magical realism in Dollfacewhich incorporates outlandish scenarios in each episode, including Jules’ Wizard of Ozstyle journey during a Women’s March and a fight between Madison and Stella where a literal chasm opens up between them. With its unique take on a familiar premise and an abundance of audacious, surreal moments, Dollface stands out among similar shows about female friendships, and it’s easy to see why Margot Robbie was so passionate about producing it.


Dollface is available for purchase on Apple TV+ in the U.S.

WATCH ON APPLE TV+

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