Five-Lion Triumph for L’Oréal’s Ilon Specht Documentary

A 17-minute portrait of Ilon Specht, the woman behind “Because I’m Worth It,” clinches Cannes Lions’ top film honour and four additional trophies while boosting L’Oréal’s brand metrics.

because shes worth it

The Final Copy of Ilon Specht, a 17-minute documentary commissioned by L’Oréal Paris and produced by McCann Paris with Breakwater Studios, collected five Cannes Lions last week, crowned by the Festival’s Film Grand Prix announced on 20 June. The haul, which jurors said “validated” the film’s emotional force, positions McCann among the event’s most awarded agencies of 2025.

Directed by two-time Oscar winner Ben Proudfoot, the short profiles Ilon Specht, the 23-year-old copywriter who in 1973 wrote “Because I’m Worth It,” the first beauty tagline voiced by a woman. In addition to the Grand Prix, the film earned honours in editing and film-craft categories, bringing its overall tally to five Lions according to festival credit lists and craft jurors’ social posts.

Film jury president Kate Stanners praised the work as “masterful” storytelling whose humanity “lives with us long after the end,” noting it prevailed over 1,642 entries in the category. She stressed that telling a brand story “through a timely personal lens” exemplified the kind of purpose-driven creativity Cannes now rewards, a sentiment echoed by fellow juror Valerie Madon in separate commentary on this year’s field.

Specht, who died in April 2024 at 81, recorded her final interview for the project, detailing clashes with male colleagues and her refusal to frame hair-color ads around pleasing men. The film premiered on the festival circuit in 2024, winning Tribeca X and HollyShorts prizes before streaming on TED, AMC+ and Prime Video, expanding its reach well beyond industry audiences.

McCann global CEO Daryl Lee credited agency president Charlotte Franceries for insisting “the power of one woman’s truth” deserved cinematic treatment rather than a conventional commercial, a strategy that has since generated more than two billion earned impressions and lifted brand consideration for L’Oréal by 70 percent among viewers. Analysts tracking Cannes outcomes say the awards underscore how documentary craft can now deliver both cultural influence and measurable brand value.

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