Margot Robbie Isn’t Just in Hollywood — She’s Shaping It
At a certain point in a career, the question changes.
It stops being about which roles you take — and starts becoming about which projects exist because you chose to make them happen.
Margot Robbie has been operating in that second category for a while now.
Her on-screen presence is already established. That part doesn’t need explanation. But what separates her in 2026 is everything happening behind the camera — the decisions that shape entire productions, not just performances.
Margot Robbie isn’t waiting for opportunities — she’s building them.
Through her production company, LuckyChap, she has shifted from participant to architect. Projects like Barbie didn’t just succeed commercially — they redefined how certain stories are packaged, marketed, and understood at a global level.
That kind of impact doesn’t come from acting alone.
It comes from control.
There’s a noticeable pattern in her choices. The projects she’s involved in tend to carry a clear identity — visually, tonally, culturally. They don’t feel generic. They feel intentional.
And intention is what scales influence.
At #87, her ranking reflects that shift from star to power player. She’s no longer just part of Hollywood’s output. She’s part of its direction.
That distinction matters more than it sounds.
Because influence at this level isn’t measured by screen time. It’s measured by decision-making — which stories get told, which voices get amplified, which projects move forward.
And increasingly, she’s in those rooms.
There’s also longevity built into this model. Acting careers rise and fall with roles. Production careers extend beyond them. By combining both, she’s creating something more stable — and more powerful.
Not just visibility.
Leverage.
In an industry that constantly shifts, that may be the most valuable position to hold.