As the 79th Cannes Film Festival unfolds, the buzz has been stolen not just by today’s stars, but by a ghost of glamour past. Following Alia Bhatt’s declaration to British Vogue that Aishwarya Rai’s 2002 debut remains the most ‘iconic’ look in the festival’s history, the world is once again looking back at the moment Bollywood truly arrived on the global stage. Also read | When Aishwarya Rai walked the red carpet at Cannes Film Festival with Shah Rukh Khan 20 years ago
Ahead of walking the red carpet at Cannes Film Festival 2026 on May 13, actor Alia Bhatt gave an interview to British Vogue. Alia said, “A Cannes look that actually goes down in my memory as absolutely iconic would have to be Aishwarya Rai Bachchan at the Devdas premiere. The beautiful saree that she wore and just her face, it was iconic.”
Aishwarya Rai’s iconic Cannes saree
It was May 2002. The occasion was the world premiere of Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s magnum opus, Devdas. But before the first frame of the film ever flickered on the screen, Aishwarya Rai — accompanied by co-star Shah Rukh Khan and the director — had already made history.
Designed by Neeta Lulla, Aishwarya’s saree was a masterclass in traditional Indian opulence. Eschewing the western gowns that usually dominate the French Riviera, the actor chose a vibrant, mustard-yellow Kanjeevaram saree. Her rich, silken drape featured intricate gold zari work along the borders.
Aishwarya was adorned in heavy, traditional gold sets — a stacked necklace, matching jhumkas, and a forearm full of bangles that caught every flashbulb. In a move that felt scripted for a movie itself, Aishwarya, with Shah Rukh and Sanjay, arrived not in a sleek limousine but in a blue-and-gold horse-drawn carriage, immediately signalling that Indian royalty had landed.
Aishwarya’s Cannes saree was a watershed moment
For many in the west, this was the first time Bollywood wasn’t just a distant industry, but a formidable force of beauty and cinematic scale. While Aishwarya was already a Miss World, this red carpet transformed her into a global obsession. As Alia noted, “Just her face… it was iconic.” That day, the international press didn’t just see an Indian actor; they saw the woman frequently dubbed ‘the most beautiful in the world’, cementing her over 20-year reign as the face of L’Oréal Paris at the festival.
At the time, Indian actors often felt pressured to conform to Western fashion standards to fit in at European festivals. Aishwarya’s choice to wear a saree was a defiant, proud celebration of Indian heritage. She didn’t just attend Cannes; she brought India to Cannes.
Two decades later, Aishwarya’s yellow saree look serves as the blueprint for every Indian star who walks the red carpet, from Deepika Padukone to Alia Bhatt. As the sun sets over the Palais des Festivals tonight, the image of Aishwarya Rai stepping out of that carriage in 2002 remains the gold standard — literally and figuratively — for the intersection of Bollywood and the world.
