
Anais Gallagher makes rare public appearance with boyfriend Callum Scott Howells as they cosy up at the Into Film Awards
Anais Gallagher looked smitten with her boyfriend Callum Scott Howells as they attended the Into Film Awards at the Odeon in Leicester Square on Tuesday.
The daughter of Oasis frontman Noel Gallagher, 25, looked more loved-up than ever as she cosied up with her man on a rare joint outing.
For the occasion, Anais looked effortlessly stylish in a pink and white striped shirt layered over blue jeans.
She teamed the look with burgundy loafers and accesorised with a pair of gold frame sunglasses which sat on top her head.
Meanwhile It's A Sin star Callum, looked cool in double denim consisting of a structured jacket and matching jeans.
The pair appeared in good spirits as they posed for sweet snaps together at the celebratory event.
Also at the awards ceremony was James Norton, Rose Ayling-Ellis, Olivia Cooke, and Elizabeth McGovern.
The Into Film Awards is an annual celebration of the filmmaking of pupils and educators from across the UK.
Categories are designed to highlight the many young creatives in the country, with hundreds of films being submitted each year.
Awards are presented by a range of film industry talent, with previous guests including Eddie Redmayne, Daniel Craig, Lily James, Amma Asante and Martin Freeman.
Anais and Callum have reportedly been seeing each other romantically since the autumn of 2023.
Callum previously confirmed he identifies as queer, telling Pink News: 'I've always been happy to say to people. So for me, it was just part of it.
'I wouldn't like to speak for anyone else on that matter. But for me it was kind of: "It is what it is".'
Anais had been spending quality time with Callum in the wake of her split from her long-term boyfriend Julius Roberts.
She was in a relationship with the farmer for three years after they got together two days before Christmas in 2019.
But a source revealed they have 'ended their relationship' in late 2022 and she was moving back up to London, after splitting her time between the city and his family farm in Dorset.
It comes after Anais hit back at those branding her a nepo baby in an impassioned interview.
Speaking to H! Fashion magazine, the influencer thanked her Oasis icon father Noel for the 'financial stability' he gave her early in life, but insisted she had paved out her own success.
She said: 'There are a lot more dangerous industries in which nepotism is around – look at Donald Trump's sons.
'I would be far more concerned with people making legislation than an actor wanting to help out their daughter who wants to be an actress.
'All my privilege and, in quotation marks, "luck" has come from my financial stability – not my dad's fame.'
The model, who Noel had with his first wife Meg Mathews just a year before their divorce in 2001, suggested that children of singers were more likely to come under fire over nepotism than those with parents successful in other professions.
'I went to school with a lot of very wealthy people who probably had the exact same amount of privilege as me, but they wouldn't get called a nepo baby because their dad's a lawyer or a politician.
'My dad paid for my private education, he paid for my university degree. I was given money to live on so I didn't have to get a job when I was at university.
'If I needed a new camera, he would buy me a new camera to help with my studies – all of those things made my life so much easier than my friends who had to struggle whilst they were studying.
'But I never wanted to be a musician, so him writing Wonderwall never really helped me out. But him having money? Yes.'
Anais boasts 269,000 followers on her Instagram account but accepted that she owes at least part of her rapid rise to her rock legend father.
'You have to look at social media as fun,' she said. 'I think I'm in a really unique position in that I never decided I wanted to be an influencer.
'I posted on my Instagram as a normal teenager would, and then, because of who my dad was, initially, I got a lot of followers. I try to navigate social media exactly the same way as my friends who would have a private account of 100 people following it.
'My biggest criticism of certain influencers is that their feed feels like a magazine.'
Of her famous dad, who is getting ready to reunite with brother Liam this summer for the first time in more than 15 years, Anais said: 'With my family, what you see is what you get. They are really hard-working people.
'With my dad, I would always go to him for help or advice – it's very funny that a rock star from the 90s is like the most level-headed person I know. He's definitely the guiding force in my life.'
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The Guardian
10 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Charli xcx at Glastonbury review – a thrilling hostile takeover by a pop star at the peak of her powers
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BBC News
26 minutes ago
- BBC News
Charli, Neil Young and Scissor Sisters give Glastonbury goosebumps
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Using up the festival's entire smoke machine budget, she was alone on stage all night, but in constant motion - a mesmerising blur of hip-rolls, hair tosses, stomach crunches and opened her set with a mash-up of 360 and Von Dutch, two of the the standout track from last summer's culture-swallowing Brat album, as the record's logo burst into flames behind her - indicating that she's slowly coming to terms with leaving it rumours that she'd bring out a host of special guests, Lorde doesn't appear to duet on Girl, So Confusing, and Billie Eilish is missing from the number one smash, Guess. The only famous face we got was Gracie Abrams, who appeared on the big screens to perform the "Apple dance" that went viral on TikTok last year. Fans were momentarily disappointed, but nothing could detract from the insolent, messy glory of tracks like Club Classics or Sympathy Is A Knife. 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A huge star at home, she'd never had a Top 40 album in this country until she released the Elton John collaboration Who Believes In Angels this her early afternoon slot, she won the crowd over with a gorgeous cover of Radiohead's Fake Plastic Trees, and prompted a few tears with the acoustic ballad You Without Me, which depicts her daughter's rocky teenage the end of the set, she was on the receiving end of a supportive chant of "olé, olé, olé"."It's official," Carlile beamed. "I have now played the greatest festival on earth… And it only took me to 44 years old to do it." Jade drew a huge crowd to the Woodsies stage, displaying her 17 years of pop experience with a slick, high concept set full of pop bangers; including a thrilling medley of songs from her old band, Little Raye got one of the day's biggest audiences at the Pyramid Stage. 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Telegraph
27 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Neil Young, Glastonbury Festival, review: A reverent display of classic rock
To no one's great surprise, there were no explosions, fireworks, articulated platforms, interactive screens, confetti or special effects at Neil Young's Glastonbury headline set. Nor, to give credit to the 79-year-old rocker, were there any of the pre-recorded backing tracks and fake vocals so ubiquitous in modern live productions. There was just an old man and his accomplished four-piece band The Chrome Hearts alternately making a heck of a grungy distorted racket, or playing acoustic campfire ballads with sweet, shaky harmonies. His first song, Sugar Mountain, contained a lovely, wheezy harmonica solo and tender vocals. His second song, Be The Rain, went on for 10 minutes raging about the environment and contained a wildly distorting guitar solo that no one in the band seemed to have any idea where it was headed, including Young who was playing it. The stocky old star in the raggy check shirt and trucker cap switched between these two poles all night, and didn't seem to give much of a damn what anyone made of it. He looked like he was enjoying himself, in any case. This is what all rock festivals used to be like, before modern day screens and blockbuster productions, and it was kind of refreshing: five men (it was usually men back in the day) who've barely dressed for the occasion stirring up an electric storm of distorted guitar stomps, revelling in their ability to conjure wild solos on the spot. 'Rock and roll will never die,' Young wailed during a long, feedbacky version of Hey Hey, My My, but the evidence was very much against him. This is like a last gasp of a fading art form, played to a receptive crowd but not a massive one. The youngsters had dispersed around the festival to see new generation pop heroes. Charli XCX drew a bigger crowd than Young at the overpacked Other Stage, breakout US rap singer Doechi was killing it on the West Holts stage and they were turning people away from camp disco pop entertainers the Scissor Sisters at the Woodsies marquee. Young entertained the faithful but when he was tuning his guitar between songs you could have heard a pin drop. In a rare production moment they summoned a keyboard that descended from overhead to play Like A Hurricane, and acted like they had just broken the fourth wall in an act of outrageous showcraft. It was kind of silly but who cares when you are listening to a band of supreme musicians find their way through one of the all time great rock songs as if they are discovering it for the first time. The staging may have been plain, but the playing was fantastic. Harvest Moon was gorgeous. The Needle and the Damage Done was moving. Rockin In The Free World was an absolute blast. It was a genuinely great Neil Young set, filled with classic songs, played and sung with passion and panache. And lots of distortion. Give me that over Charli XCX miming or the 1975 posturing on stage every time.