Anya Taylor-Joy writes captions like she's training to host the Met Gala. Polished, literary, slightly old-Hollywood — there's no 'literally' or 'iconic' anywhere in her feed. She'll thank the team using full names and titles. She uses 'darling' and 'beloved' without irony. The whole voice is the opposite of casual — and somehow it works, because the captions match her career trajectory: deliberate, classical, never quite of this moment.

Anya Taylor-Joy's iconic captions

My darlings, the film is out. I am so proud of this team. Please go see it. ♟️

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Buenos Aires, my beloved.

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Dior — thank you for the most beautiful evening of my life.

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Furiosa — the woman, the film, the love of my life this past year.

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To my beloved cast, thank you for these months. I love you.

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Cannes. Always a feeling.

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Glamour by the impossibly talented @patidubroff.

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New project announcement coming — stay close. ♟️

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Argentina forever 🇦🇷

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Tilda — my beloved. ♟️

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What makes Anya's captions work

The pattern

Mixed case, full sentences, em dashes. Heavy use of 'darling' and 'beloved' for friends. Country tags after travel posts. Project names italicized in spirit, capitalized properly. No hashtags except partnership posts. One or two emojis maximum.

When this voice works

Works for fashion, film, fragrance, and any post where elegance is the brand. Doesn't work for casual or comedic posts — the formality flattens humor. Use it when you want the audience to feel a little dressed up reading it.

One specific observation

She's the only millennial A-lister using the word 'beloved' in captions on purpose. It started as an affect; now it reads as a brand.