Global Talent Shines in Iconic Vogue Cover Featuring Scarlett Johansson.

Scarlett Johansson is used to getting her own magazine covers.

But for the April issue of US Vogue, the actress happily shared the front with several different women for a rare double issue.

The theme of the issue was Global Talent and the aim was to celebrate female talent from 14 countries around the world.

Group effort: Scarlett Johansson is used to getting her own magazine covers. But for the April issue of US Vogue, the actress happily shared the front with South Korean actress Doona Bae and Indian actress Deepika Padukone.

The Avengers actress shares the main cover with South Korean actress Doona Bae and Indian actress Deepika Padukone.

Johansson told the fashion bible that when she was 17 she filmed Lost In Translation in Tokyo and found it ‘really hard.’

She added, ‘It was a seven-week shoot; I missed my boyfriend; we had a Japanese crew, so there was a language barrier.

New world: Johansson said when she was 17 she filmed Lost In Translation in Tokyo and found it ‘really hard.’ She added, ‘It was a seven-week shoot; I missed my boyfriend; we had a Japanese crew, so there was a language barrier’; seen with Bill Murray

The beauty is living in NYC with SNL star Colin Jost. Her new movie is Avengers: End Game with Robert Downey Jr and Chris Evans

‘I remember being quite lonely. It was just a different time to be an American in Tokyo.’

But today everyone is much more connected because of social media, she said.

Johansson, who was on the cover to promote her new movie Avengers: Endgame, said everything has become more saturated: ‘There’s a scope to entertainment,’ she said.

Another home run: Featured on the second cover are French actress Lea Seydoux, Chinese social star Angelababy, Australian actress Elizabeth Debicki, and Nigerian actress Adesua Etomi-Wellington

There was also talk about gender.

‘I’d like to have no nationality and no gender,’ said Seydoux, who won the Palme d’Or at Cannes for her portrayal of a lesbian artist in Blue Is The Warmest Color.

‘I’d like to have no nationality and no gender,’ said Seydoux; seen in Paris on March 5

Alba Rohrwacher—born to a German father and an Italian mother — said she wants to ‘play a male part. Like Cate Blanchett in I’m Not There or Tilda Swinton in Orlando.’

‘We’ve had so many different kinds of men on-screen. We’ve had so many heroes, so many antiheroes; we’ve had crime, romance, drama, thrillers; we’ve had psychos and kings,’ added Debicki, an Australian.

‘We don’t get to run the gamut like that as women. We need a myriad of experiences.’

Elizabeth talked the atmosphere after the #MeToo movement launched.

‘A space has opened up, and people are saying what they want. Women talk to one another more about collaborating. There is, in a way there hasn’t been before, a sense of connective tissue,’ she said,

Writer Gaby Wood talked to women from Australia, South Korea, Nigeria, and Iceland