Lizzy and Georgia May Jagger on Scent, Sisterhood and Rock-and-Roll Style (Exclusive)
Lizzy and Georgia May Jagger on Scent, Sisterhood and Rock-and-Roll Style (Exclusive)
Brittany TalaricoWed, April 15, 2026 at 6:50 PM UTC
0
Lizzy Jagger and Georgia May Jagger star in Jo Malone London's new sisterhood campaignCredit: Courtesy Jo Malone -
Lizzy and Georgia May Jagger open up to PEOPLE about their close sisterly bond, evolving from childhood admiration to best friends navigating motherhood and modeling together
The duo fronts Jo Malone London's new sisterhood campaign as global ambassadors for the iconic British brand
They also share insight into their beauty routines, personal style and what their famous parents — supermodel Jerry Hall and Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger — have taught them
Few siblings carry the cultural legacy that the Jagger sisters do. The daughters of Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger and supermodel Jerry Hall, Lizzy and Georgia May, grew up immersed in glamour, creativity and constant travel, shuttling between backstage dressing rooms and fashion sets.
Now 42 and 34, they've evolved into British It girls with refreshingly grounded outlooks. Both are models and mothers to sons, and prioritize family above all else—and when they can combine family with work, as they have done in their new roles as global ambassadors for Jo Malone London, it's all the better.
Their easy, playful dynamic is evident in the brand's sisterhood campaign, which celebrates the hot-selling scents English Pear & Freesia (Lizzy's go-to) and English Pear & Sweet Pea (Georgia May's fave). The fragrances, delicate and layerable, mirror the sisters themselves: distinct yet deeply intertwined.
Lizzy Jagger in Jo Malone London's new campaignCredit: Courtesy Jo Malone
For Lizzy, the connection to the Jo Malone London brand is intimate and familial.
“Pears are my son's and my favorite fruit, which already makes it feel really personal, and sweet pea is my mother's favorite flower," she tells PEOPLE during an intimate sit-down at the Jo Malone London townhouse in Marylebone, London, which serves as the brand's fragrance atelier and event space. "When we visit her [in the English countryside], she picks them and puts them next to our beds, which is such a small but meaningful thing. So that scent is really tied to family and those moments together.”
Georgia May's relationship with the brand is equally nostalgic. “It's just such an iconic English brand; I remember growing up with the scents in the house. I also love the idea that you can layer the fragrances—it's not just one scent, it's how they work together. Their fragrances are very light. You're able to do it because it's not overpowering.”
Jo Malone London English Pear & Freesia and English Pear & Sweet Pea fragrancesCredit: Courtesy Jo Malone
Despite an almost eight-year age gap, the sisters' dynamic has evolved into something both playful and deeply supportive over the years as they've navigated both modeling and motherhood together.
“Lizzy basically pretended to be my mum when I was really young,” Georgia May recalls. “I wanted to be just like her, and she was so sweet to me. When she started modeling, she'd take me to Kurt Geiger and buy me a bunch of different shoes. I was like, ‘This is the best day of my life!' Now it's shifted into us becoming friends. Lizzy also gives great advice; her son is older than mine, and I'm always asking her things.”
Lizzy laughs at the memory: “I used to dress her up as a doll! Now the age gap worked in our favor because now we're really, really close as adults and genuinely best friends. I get very inspired by her decisiveness.”
Georgia May Jagger in Jo Malone London's new campaign.Credit: Courtesy Jo Malone
Much of their perspective traces back to their mother, whose practical wisdom still guides them. Lizzy notes her uncanny ability to diagnose a bad day with simple advice: drink more water. “Strangely, she's often right,” she says. "Mums psychically know what's going on with your body."
Advertisement
For Georgia May, her mother's influence is more philosophical. She admires her unapologetic embrace of aging and her enthusiasm for life.
"She's never been afraid of getting older. She'll say ‘I'm almost 70' all the time, and she's planning a big [birthday] party. It's something she's very proud of, which I think is really powerful.”
Jerry Hall, her daughters Lizzy and Georgia May Jagger, and grandsons in Burberry's 2025 Mother's Day campaignCredit: Courtesy Burberry
Growing up surrounded by fashion and music also shaped their understanding of beauty as something expressive and, at times, theatrical. Lizzy reflects on how their upbringing normalized bold, exaggerated aesthetics—from their mother's stage glamour to their father's own experimental looks. “Not many people's fathers did a blue eyeshadow in the '70s,” she jokes.
Georgia May adds that while they embrace a more casual style day-to-day, they still appreciate that sense of high glamour. It's a duality that carries into their wardrobes, often quite literally.
She frequently draws from her mother's archive, recently wearing an '80s Antony Price dress to the 2025 Fashion Awards that made her feel “very powerful.” Lizzy, meanwhile, has found her own unexpected inheritance in their father's closet. "I am the same pants size as our dad, so I'm really lucky. I've got so many great flares and bell- bottoms from the '70s. It's, like, half my wardrobe.”
Mick Jagger joined by daughters Georgia May and Lizzy Jagger at the 2017 Vanity Fair Oscars Party.Credit: Kevin Mazur/VF17/WireImage
Perhaps their most enduring lesson from the 82-year-old rock icon: curiosity. Georgia May describes his insistence on engaging with the world—visiting museums, learning local history, and fully immersing himself in each place they visit. "He's always like, ‘You've got to know about the history of where you are,'”
Lizzy agrees that their dad is the family's "tour guide," adding that he always reminds them to "Be educated, know your history, and be a good traveler!”
Their beauty philosophies reflect that same balance of ritual and ease. “I give myself a face massage when I put on my face cream. I really like doing that. It's a special little moment,” Lizzy shares. Georgia May prefers a more immersive reset: “I love doing a sheet mask and having a 15-minute at-home facial. I have my own skin care range [May Botanicals], and we make them from kelp.”
Lizzy adds, with sisterly humor, “Georgia's face mask is made of seaweed, so you can put one on and dream that you're a mermaid.”
on People
Source: “AOL Entertainment”