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A-list Hollywood actress spills on her hilarious encounter with Duchess Meghan

She described Meghan as "warm, kind and actually very LOLs".
Duchess Meghan stars in British Vogue's "Forces For Change" video
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The star of a hit Netflix show has spilled the beans about her hilarious encounter with Duchess Meghan, when the two worked together on her recent guest editorโ€™s issue of British Vogue.

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Meghan worked with the magazineโ€™s editor-in-chief Edward Enninful on the upcoming September issue and declined his offer to appear on the cover, instead choosing to highlight 15 women who she described as โ€œForces For Changeโ€.

The new issue promotes this amazing cohort of trailblazing changemakers, all of whom are โ€œunited by their fearlessness in breaking barriers,โ€ according to a statement from Buckingham Palace.

One of these amazing women is British actress Jameela Jamil, who stars in the hit Netflix series The Good Place.

Jameela, 33, is an incredible body positivity activist and frequently calls out dangerous advertising and negative media messaging that makes women feel bad about their bodies, so she was a perfect fit for the โ€œForces For Changeโ€ theme.

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READ NEXT: Meet all the incredible women Duchess Meghan hand-picked to feature in Vogue

Jameela has more than two million followers on Instagram.

(Image: Getty Images)

Jameela revealed that when she was first approached by Edward Enninful months ago to write an essay for Vogue on gender equality and societal expectations of women, she had no idea that Duchess Meghan was involved in the project at all.

โ€œWe werenโ€™t told there was a guest editor, and definitely not that it was Meghan,โ€ Jameela told Grazia UK.

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She discovered the truth in the most hilarious way: โ€œMeghan called me herself. I missed the call three times before I finally answered, I wanted to punch myself!โ€

Jameela Jamil (right) with her The Good Place co-star Kristen Bell.

(Image: NBC)

โ€œShe explained that sheโ€™d guest-edited the issue, and apologised that the whole thing had been shrouded in so much secrecy. She said she had chosen to feature me because sheโ€™d seen what I had been doing and was a fan. To know that she had followed my work with [body positivity movement] I Weigh meant a lot.โ€

Jameela described Meghan as โ€œwarm, kind and actually very LOLsโ€.

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โ€œI had never met her before, but we chatted very openly. She told me how important gender equality was to her,โ€ she revealed.

READ NEXT: Why Meghanโ€™s Vogue collaboration was different from other royal women

Meghanโ€™s โ€œForces For Changeโ€ British Vogue cover.

(Image: Instagram @sussexroyal)

A stunning behind-the-scenes picture of Meghan working on the issue.

(Image: Instagram @sussexroyal)
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Plus, the pair had a particularly hilarious connection, as Jameelaโ€™s character Tahani Al-Jamil actually making a reference to Meghanโ€™s relationship with Prince Harry on The Good Place

In one episode, Tahani mentions that she was the matchmaker responsible for setting Harry and Meghan up in the first place.

(Of course, we know thatโ€™s not true! That special honour goes to a very different celebrity pal).

โ€œShe said she loved The Good Place,โ€ Jameela revealed to Grazia.

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โ€œI then felt immediately embarrassed that she had seen me joke about her on the show. She said sheโ€™s grateful to Tahani for introducing her to Harry. I just replied, โ€˜Youโ€™re welcomeโ€™.โ€

WATCH BELOW: Our favourite posts from Meghan Markleโ€™s now-deleted Instagram account. Story continues after video.

Our favourite posts from Meghan Markle's DELETED Instagram
Our favourite posts from Meghan Markle's DELETED Instagram
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Jameela said that to be featured in the pages of Vogue was an incredible honour, especially for someone who has fought against the unrealistic body standards often perpetuated by womenโ€™s magazines.

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โ€œI was a teenage anorexic model and all I wanted was to be in Vogue,โ€ she said.

โ€œBut it took me gaining 30lbs (14.6kg), to be in my thirties, and to be fighting against those very things to actually manage it. Here, our minds, talent and contribution were the focus, rather than our looks โ€“ and that is so important.โ€

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