TO COME | Who What Wear UK Leave a comment


If you have yet to watch Industry, I have a few words of warning: do not watch if your anxiety levels are quick to rise, do not watch if you like your plots neat and characters tidy and absolutely do not watch with your parents. Which is to say that it is brilliant, blistering television; smart, spiky, shocking and scorching-hot appointment viewing.

The HBO/BBC show, which wraps its fourth season tonight, follows the plotting and scheming of a sprawling cast of characters in the world of finance. At the centre of it all is Marisa Abela as Yasmin Kara-Hanani, now the marvellously named Lady Muck following her marriage to Sir Henry Muck (played, brilliantly, by Kit Harrington). Damaged, ruthless, vicious and vulnerable, she is complex; a walking contradiction swaddled in expensive knitwear.

MARISA ABELA SPRING ISSUE 2026

(Image credit: Photography: Charlotte Hadden, Styling: Jacket and Jeans, Agolde; Top, Fruity Booty; Shoes, Amina Muaddi; Ring, L’Atelier Nawbar)

“She’s a provocateur. She likes to shake up a room,” says Abela, over a coffee in East London before her Who What Wear UK cover shoot. Thoughtful, engaged and with a sparkling laugh, in person, Abela shares Yasmin’s charisma, though none of her character’s snooty brusqueness. Saluting the “richness” of the character, Abela adds: “She has intense moments of darkness and intense moments of levity and humour. That keeps people guessing with her but also draws them in. … She presents as a predator, but she is the ultimately well-evolved prey. She completely fits into her environment in order to survive.”

An unknown 22-year-old when she got the part of Yasmin (Abela was still at drama school, RADA, when she auditioned), the role has not only won her plaudits, including Best Leading Actress at the 2025 BAFTA Television Awards, but catapulted her to being-stopped-in-the-street fame. There was also her turn as Amy Winehouse in Back to Black, and a part in Stephen Soderbergh’s espionage thriller Black Bag alongside Cate Blanchett and Michael Fassbender. The day before our interview, she was doing a new play reading with James Norton, whilst she’s also currently filming action fantasy Highlander with Russell Crowe and Henry Cavill.

MARISA ABELA SPRING ISSUE 2026

(Image credit: Photography: Charlotte Hadden, Styling: Dress and Shoes, Dior; Ring and Earrings, Cartier)

MARISA ABELA SPRING ISSUE 2026

(Image credit: Future)

Given this schedule, downtime has been somewhat limited for Abela over the past few months. “I just went on my honeymoon. That was probably the last time I was like, phone down, whatever. My husband [actor Jamie Bogyo, whom she met at RADA] and I really love to travel. I train a lot, I read a lot.” She loves that Highlander is a really physical job. “It’s a lot of training in a martial-arts-y-jujitsu way, which is really fun, and it takes the sort of ‘I am exercising’ thing out of it; you just realise after two hours that you are.” Abela is also a big Real Housewives stan (New York, Beverly Hills and Salt Lake City are her jam, and she has hung out with Dorinda Medley in New York), so she’s palpably buzzing over the just-announced news that the OG New York crew are getting back together for a TV return.

MARISA ABELA SPRING ISSUE 2026

(Image credit: Photography: Charlotte Hadden, Styling: Top and Skirt, Balenciaga; Shoes, Jimmy Choo; Earrings, Cartier)

Although there are enough rumours and nastiness in any episode of Industry to make even the bitchiest Housewife blush, season 4 has a particular potent sting in its examination of issues around sexual exploitation and consent, highlighted by Yasmin’s boundary-busting relationship with young assistant Hayley, played superbly by Kiernan Shipka. Viewers have been quick to note parallels between Yasmin and Ghislaine Maxwell.

MARISA ABELA SPRING ISSUE 2026

(Image credit: Future)

MARISA ABELA SPRING ISSUE 2026

(Image credit: Photography: Charlotte Hadden, Styling: Jacket, Shirt and Skirt, Fendi; Shoes, Sportmax; Ear Cuff, Ananya)

Abela says she understands the cultural fascination we have with “women that fill up spaces, that are so close to power—especially power that feels slightly sour”, like the current White House Press Secretary, Karoline Leavitt. Sometimes rightfully, sometimes not, there’s a deep distrust of these women, she says. “We’re like, how do you reconcile this to yourself? We don’t necessarily ask the same question of men. We might [ask], ‘How do you sleep at night?’, but we know how they sleep at night; they’re fine! It feels like women ought to have higher social [and] moral responsibility than men.”