No, because she’s not officially an A-lister. The media throws around
 that term the way Hollywood hands out producer credits, but that 
doesn’t mean the label is really fair or applicable. Technically, the 
A-list is reserved for folks who can get a film financed on name alone —
 and not just stateside. A-listers must carry financial clout overseas 
as well, enough to guarantee that foreign booties will populate theater 
seats, or couches on home-movie night, to a significant degree.
Lupita Nyong’o, while undoubtedly radiant, talented, and on the rise,
 isn’t even in the same league as an established star, someone who has 
played the Hollywood game since before the birth of Twitter. Could 
Nyong’o land the cover of a glossy magazine tomorrow if she felt like 
it? Possibly; she’s already graced New York, W, Marie Claire, and 
Entertainment Weekly, to name just a few.
But could she command, say the $20 million that Angelina Jolie 
reportedly got for “Mr. and Mrs. Smith” — the same amount she’ll 
supposedly make if she stars in “Salt 2″? Or even the $10 million that 
contemporary Jennifer Lawrence won for “The Hunger Games: Catching 
Fire”?
Not necessarily.
What Nyong’o is isn’t an A-lister. Not yet, though you should check back
 with me in a year or two. No, Nyong’o is something very different, and,
 potentially, just as powerful, though in a different way. Nyong’o is an
 “It Girl.” And in that regard, she may very well have risen faster than
 any other It Girl in recent memory, having skyrocketed from nobody to 
media darling in the course of a single movie.
“She’s only been in the spotlight for a year,” veteran fashion publicist
 Cole Trider of Autumn Communications tells me. “That’s huge. As careers
 go, that rarely happens so quickly.”
In comparison, let’s look at old-school it girl Julia Roberts. Teens of 
the late 1980s liked her early performances in small movies such as 
“Mystic Pizza.” But she’d worked in the film biz for about two years 
before breaking huge as the female lead opposite Richard Gere in “Pretty
 Woman.” After that movie debuted circa 1990, big, wavy, barely 
controllable hair became the rage.
Late ’90s it girl Gwyneth Paltrow spent even longer rising to the top
 of the publicity heap; she spent either five or seven years building 
her film resume, depending on whom you ask, before she became a 
household name. “Emma” was in 1996, the same year she scored her first 
Vogue cover; “Shakespeare in Love,” the film that won her an Oscar 
nomination and the chance to wear the terribly tailored, and yet somehow
 historic, Pink Ralph Lauren Gown Seen Round the World, debuted in 1998.
Plum Sykes of Vogue called that Oscar night Paltrow’s “Grace Kelly” moment, but, really, it was her debut as a fashion It Girl.
“Her Grace Kelly moment, when she won Best Actress for ‘Shakespeare in 
Love’ at the 1999 Oscars in Ralph Lauren’s pink princess dress, 
transported her from starlet to icon,” Sykes recalled in a hard-to-find 
2002 homage.
“Afterward, I kept seeing that dress everywhere, BCBG knockoffs or 
whatever,” Paltrow told Sykes at the time. “And I was like, ‘I hate that
 dress! I can’t stand that dress!’ Now when I see that dress I die for 
it. I think it’s so beautiful.”
Even the aforementioned Lawrence didn’t shoot to the top of the 
fashion-and-lady-mag game right out of the gate a la Nyong’o. After two 
years in movies, Lawrence landed her first Oscar nomination for 
“Winter’s Bone, wearing Calvin Klein to the ceremony. It was a nice 
dress. Some people liked it. But Calvin Klein is certainly no Dior, 
which reportedly is paying Lawrence a pretty $15 million for an extended
 three-year endorsement gig.
As for why Nyong’o was able to shoot to the absolute top so quickly, 
Trider credits several factors. Nyong’o, unlike some of her 
contemporaries, genuinely cared about fashion from the get-go. It 
doesn’t hurt that Nyong’o also happens to be a bona fide Stunner. But 
the biggest factor may be one big, very lucky, meeting, with a stylist 
named Micaela Erlanger. Vanity Fair has called Erlanger the “woman 
behind the star,” and it may be right.
Nyong’o met Erlanger through Michelle Dockery, another stylista, while the two were shooting the film “Nonstop.”
“She and Lupita were talking, and Lupita said, ‘I have this film coming 
out, “12 Years a Slave,” and I need a stylist,’” Trider explains. “The 
first major red carpet Lupita and Micaela did together was for the 
Toronto Film Festival… and after that, it was like, boom.”
Boom indeed.
