One Day in New York with Bhavitha Mandava

Fashion 22 May 2026 read

One Day in New York with Bhavitha Mandava

The i-D cover star shot to fame as the engineering student who opened Chanel’s New York City runway show. the Indian model is more than a viral sensation—she’s here to stay.

By Mayer Rus Photography by Rich Stapleton
listen

Share

For a while there, it seemed as if fashion had altogether outgrown the art of scouting a model from the wilds of real life. Sure, one might still get “discovered” on Instagram or TikTok these days, but the tales of the truly great runway models being plucked from the plebeian crowds—Gisele Bündchen spotted whilst eating Big Macs on holiday or Natalia Vodianova snapped up from her hometown of Nizhny Novgorod in Russia—have been relegated to myth. It’s yet another disappearing analogue from the 1990s that fashion people talk about with nostalgia, the same way they bemoan the large budgets and folded magazines of the olden days.

But that was before Bhavitha Mandava.

Seldom does fashion virality, generated on the highest and most gatekept echelon of runway, overflow into civilian life the way it did for the 25-year-old model, who opened the Chanel Métiers d’art fashion show in December—yes, the one held inside an abandoned New York City subway station. Post-show, Mandava posted a heartbreakingly sweet clip to her Instagram, captioned “my brown parents’ reaction to me opening the Chanel show,”which exploded with the kind of resonant intensity (26.2 million views) to rival a Marvel movie’s box office numbers. At first, the internet was abuzz with curiosity about her identity—who was this incredibly beautiful younge.

banner

“I did get a little overwhelmed [at first],” she tells me. We’re drinking hot chocolate on a freezing Wednesday in January. During our conversation in the mostly-empty café, we’re interrupted by a grandmotherly white lady in her 70s, who shyly comes up to Mandava to express her admiration. She’d found out about the model from her neighbours Sanjeev and Alka, who told her about the Indian girl who walked in the Chanel fashion show. She could not wait to tell them that she’d met her in real life. Another young man leans over to politely remark, “I can’t believe I’m just sitting right next to you.”

““For the first time in my life, I was given this opportunity of, ‘We got you. Your rent will be paid. Your food is on the table.” ” BHAVITHA MANDAVA

The adoration is pure and completely devoid of the malice sometimes directed at objects of new stardom. Mandava’s attitude toward this whole fame thing, so far, has been one of unflappability. She’s neither too moved by it nor completely dismissive of the ways it’s changed her life. But yes, it’s still been a lot to take in. “I locked myself in for, like, two weeks,” she says of the initial wave of.

Image
John F Kennedy Jr and Carolyn Bessette in New York City Getty Images
Image
John F Kennedy Jr and Carolyn Bessette in New York City Getty Images
Image
John F Kennedy Jr and Carolyn Bessette in New York City Getty Images
Image
John F Kennedy Jr and Carolyn Bessette in New York City Getty Images

“If I could work with Matthieu and Chanel forever, I would love that.” BHAVITHA MANDAVA

In the flurry of news articles chronicling Mandava’s rise to runway supremacy, the word “Cinderella-esque” has been invoked more than once—which is fair, considering the obvious parallels: beautiful young woman, miraculously rescued from a life of labour, becomes the people’s princess. The ugly stepsisters in Mandava’s fairy tale, however—in a modern twist—have been 1) a historically awful job market and 2) the limitations on immigration options for international students in America, who cannot work on an F-1 visa.

Born in the city of Vijayawada, in the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, and brought up in Hyderabad, Mandava is the child of classic middle-class Indian parents, who raised her with the classic middle-class Indian ethos of “work hard, get job.” It doesn’t account for what happens when you “work hard,” but the “get job” part doesn’t follow. I understand this fallacy on a fundamental level, because I too am a product of the same system, which refuses to acknowledge the larger structural forces that play a role in things like employment. For the many of us raised having completely internalised this system of belief—that putting your head down automatically begets success—that first encounter with the American job market comes as a stunning reality check. Mandava was stumped.

An architect by training, she came to America in 2023 to pursue a master’s in integrated design and media at Nyu’s Tandon School of Engineering, where she worked as a design lab coordinator for $30 an hour on the side. “From day one, I was hustling, right? I got the job on campus. I was prepping for internships. Suddenly, the job market froze.” I got the job on campus. I was prepping for internships. Suddenly, the job market froze.”

Image
Image
Image
Image
Various waterways connect Kerala and its most ancient sites of worship Getty Images

She might not have known who Matthieu Blazy was when she first met him, but Mandava is leveraging her newfound embrace of the industry to learn more and more about the different houses and their designers. She’s curious about Daniel Roseberry’s work at Schiaparelli and Anthony Vaccarello’s at Saint Laurent. “If I could work with Matthieu and Chanel forever, I would love that, right? But I’m naming brands I didn’t know a few months back. I’m so obsessed with them!” She doesn’t yet recognise all the industry people who say hi to her backstage, but she’s stayed close with the Chanel fit models with whom she started out.

Image
Carolyn Bessette in New York City Getty Images
Image
Various waterways connect Kerala and its most ancient sites of worship Getty Images
Join Our Newsletter

We're making your inbox interesting. Enter your email to get our best reads and exclusive insights from our editors delivered directly to you.

More Articles