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Fashions inspired by Barbie skyrocket after movie trailer release – how to nail the look – Daily Mail

  1. Fashions inspired by Barbie skyrocket after movie trailer release – how to nail the look Daily Mail
  2. ‘Barbie’ star Ryan Gosling defended by fans after critics called him too old to play Ken Fox News
  3. Barbie ‘expert’ reveals all the fun Easter eggs she spotted in the new movie trailer, and TikTok is obsessed In The Know
  4. Fans use ‘Barbie’ film posters to give celebrities new slogans Insider
  5. Chrissy Teigen Joins Legion Of Fans Obsessed With That Foot Scene In Margot Robbie’s Barbie Trailer Yahoo Entertainment
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Met Gala 2022: politics rises to the surface on fashion’s biggest night | Met Gala 2022

Politics – personal, contemporary and historic – were close to the surface on New York’s Upper East Side on Monday night as 600 guests, invited to celebrate America’s Gilded Age at the Met Gala, offered their own interpretation of style and the multitude of meanings dress carries, then as now.

The singer Alicia Keys wore a cape celebrating New York union history. New York’s mayor, Eric Adams, who had said he’d been “dying to go” to the fundraiser “for years”, arrived on the red carpet wearing a jacket with decorative forearms and lapels that paid homage to the city’s transit system. The back of his coat read “End Gun Violence” in red lettering.

The mayor of New York City, Eric Adams, with his partner Tracey Collins. Photograph: Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic

The former secretary of state Hillary Clinton came in a dress inspired by friendship quilts inscribed with the names, she explained, of “gutsy women” of the 19th and 20th century liberation movements.

But the celebration of women’s progress toward equal rights came as news surfaced that the US supreme court had provisionally voted to overturn Roe v Wade, the landmark ruling that legalised abortion nationwide in America, according to a draft opinion reported on by Politico.

Politics at the event returned again when Kim Kardashian appeared on the red carpet in the iconic dress Marilyn Monroe wore to coo Happy Birthday to President Kennedy in 1962.

Hamish Bowles, the World of Interiors editor, sporting a raffish matinee idol moustache and gold tiara, said: “Tonight our hearts are with the people of Ukraine and the victims of war and displacement around the world.” The publisher, the major sponsor of the event, had made a donation to the Red Cross and encouraged “those who can to do so as well”.

Dame Anna Wintour’s “In America: An Anthology of Fashion”-themed ball kicked off at the Metropolitan Museum of Art with Priscilla Presley on hand to pitch Baz Luhrmann’s upcoming Elvis movie, Anderson .Paak in “Gucci from head to toe” and Ashton Sanders offering up “Blade, vampire tip”.

Riz Ahmed, in a T-shirt and worker’s shirt, said he was “trying elevate and celebrate working-class immigrants”. Amy Schumer said “when Gabriella Hearst offers to dress you put your Spanx on right over your c-section scar.” Janelle Monáe promoted her sc-fi book. Blake Lively came as the Statue of Liberty.

Amy Schumer. Photograph: Angela Weiss/AFP/Getty Images

The Met Gala is a commercial proposition, light years away from its creation, in 1946, by the publicist Eleanor Lambert, who is credited with bringing European fashion to America.

The influential trade publication the Business of Fashion said this year’s event might be the “most important Met Gala” of Wintour’s career. After two years of interruption – one cancelled by Covid-19; another under-attended due to international travel bans and vaccine requirements – Monday’s gala was reported to have returned to full strength.

With tables costing $200,000 to $300,000, last year’s event in September raised $16.4m for the Costume Institute. But it’s also a money-maker for Vogue. According to Amy Odell’s newly published biography on Wintour, now Condé Nast’s global chief content officer, it is the publisher’s pitch to sell advertising. This year it is also a pitch to sell online subscriptions to Vogue.com and corral visitors to the Met museum.

“At the end of the day, this is an extremely important fundraiser,” Anna-Lisa Yabsley, Condé Nast head of digital strategy, told BoF. “Everything we do content-wise is about raising awareness and getting people through the door.”

Vogue charged $1m for two, six-second spots on its Met Gala live stream over the course of two hours, according to BoF. Tracking data showsthe stream pulled 16m views, along with 260m gala-related views across social media.

According to the tracking firm Launchmetrics, the night generates $543m in media impact value, or the effect of placements and mentions – compared with the Super Bowl’s $520m. According to BoF, the more Vogue can market the Met Gala as the Super Bowl of fashion, the more it will be able to charge.

Kim Kardashian, pictured with Pete Davidson, in the iconic Marilyn Monroe dress. Photograph: Stephen Lovekin/BEI/Rex/Shutterstock

Earlier Monday, the first lady, Dr Jill Biden, kicked off a preview of the show, which features nine commissioned films by directors including Radha Blank, Janicza Bravo, Sofia Coppola, Julie Dash, Autumn de Wilde, and Chloé Zhao, last year’s Oscar best picture winner.

The films celebrate overlooked figures in early American fashion, especially female designers, and especially those of color. The Costume Institute’s head curator, Andrew Bolton, said when announcing the show, they “have been forgotten, overlooked, or relegated to a footnote in the annals of fashion history”.

The Met Ball itself, fashion activists have said, has long been an opportunity for greater inclusivity than the structure of the publisher, or its pages, had embraced until racial protests in 2020.

In her remarks, Biden said: “style helps us express things that can’t be put in words.

“The way we carry ourselves, how we put our shoulders back when times are hard, or offer a friendly smile even when we don’t agree. How we choose to show up for our communities – the small acts of kindness that are remembered long after they are offered.”

She continued: “And that includes what we wear.”



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Insiders say Met Gala fashions no longer chic: ‘very Halloween’

In 1883, Alice Claypoole Vanderbilt attended her sister-in-law’s famed masquerade party in a dazzling gold-and-silver gown, custom from Paris, dubbed Electric Light, complete with hidden batteries that illuminated a torch she held above her head.

Today’s A-listers hope to generate their own electricity at Monday night’s Met Gala, the dress code for which is “gilded glamour.” Yet instead of cutting-edge frocks like Mrs. Vanderbilt’s, some insiders fear that attendees will embrace the tackiest aspects of late-19th-century Manhattan society. Will dresses resemble the costumes on the popular HBO series “The Gilded Age,” in which Carrie Coon’s social-climbing Bertha swans around her Fifth Avenue mansion in couture?

While flamboyance has helped make Anna Wintour’s annual Met Gala the most anticipated red carpet of the year — “It’s a bigger deal than the Oscars,” said Christina Pacelli, who has dressed celebs such as Laverne Cox for the big evening — some observers say the get-ups have gotten too garish. 

In 1996, Princess Diana attended the gala in a sleek Dior slip dress.
Bertrand Rindoff Petroff/Getty Images

“It’s turned into a costume party,” designer and frequent gala chair Tom Ford told journalist Amy Odell in her book “Anna: The Biography,” out Tuesday.

“[It] used to just be very chic people wearing very beautiful clothes going to an exhibition about the 18th century,” Ford continued. “You didn’t have to look like the 18th century, you didn’t have to dress like a hamburger, you didn’t have to arrive in a van where you were standing up because you couldn’t sit down because you wore a chandelier.”

Ford may have a slightly idealized view of the galas of yore — at least one person showed up to 1981’s ball, themed for the exhibit “The Eighteenth-Century Woman,” dressed in knee breeches! But the clothes and themes have gotten kookier in the days since Princess Diana attended in a sleek Dior slip dress. 

Designer Gianni Versace and model Naomi Campbell at the benefit in 1995.
Gene Shaw/Getty Images

Recent years have seen Rihanna don a pope hat for 2018’s “Heavenly Bodies,” Jared Leto carrying a replica of his own head for 2019’s “Camp” and Lil Nas X model a sexy C-3PO costume for last year’s “American Independence,” which he shed to reveal a sparkly Versace catsuit underneath. 

And lest you think Ford was exaggerating, Katy Perry did wear a chandelier and a hamburger costume — on the same night.

Katy Perry wore a hamburger costume in 2019.
Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

‘It’s very Halloween’

“Some of the things that Kim Kardashian has worn — I mean, it’s very Halloween,” said John Tiffany, a fashion historian and brand consultant who once assisted Eleanor Lambert, the legendary fashion publicist who dreamed up the Met’s first Costume Institute benefit, then called the Party of the Year, in 1948. Back then, Tiffany said, the party was a fund-raiser dinner, but in the 1970s, when freshly fired Vogue editor Diana Vreeland started manning the Costume Institute, the gala became linked with whatever fashion exhibit was opening at the museum, “which were always completely over the top.”

“It’s always been a creative party,” said Dennita Sewell, a fashion professor at Arizona State University who worked at the Costume Institute in the 1990s — when lower-rung staffers could actually attend the party. “People always dressed up, but it wasn’t so extreme … No one would have done something that wasn’t graceful and elegant.” 

Kim Kardashian in Balenciaga in 2021.
Justin Lane/EPA

“The themes were noted,” she added, “but it wasn’t like the whole party was competing with the exhibition.”

Sometimes it can feel that way.

“It’s gone from an industry event celebrating the history of fashion to one celebrating celebrity,” stylist Tracy Taylor told The Post. “Designers were really the focus of the galas in the 20th century and early 21st century: Alexander McQueen, Halston — Halston would have never designed something that you couldn’t sit in! But lately, the focus is on themes, and I do feel like it’s encouraging more extreme interpretations and outfits.”

Last year, Lil Nas X sported a sexy C3PO costume, for “American Independence,” which he shed to reveal a sparkly Versace catsuit underneath.
Mike Coppola/Getty Images

The invite list has changed to include more celebrities — particularly, in recent years, musicians, who are used to wearing costumes onstage and often treat fashion as performance.

“When you’re a musician like Rihanna, it’s not such a huge stretch to look outlandish,” Taylor said. “They’re expected to be a bit more flamboyant or really be creative and show who they are through how they dress.” And that translates to the red carpet.

Jared Leto holding a replica of his own head in 2019. The theme that year was “Camp.”
Karwai Tang/Getty Images

Gilded controversy

“Gilded glamour” is a dress code that allows for lots of different interpretations — from a corset gown with a huge bustle and swaths of sumptuous taffeta to a slinky gold lamé slip to a sequin frock — and plenty of ways to up the ante. 

The Gilded Age was one of “enormous growth and wealth due to industrialization and real estate, and the dresses reflected that opulence,” Taylor said. “It was about these new celebrities and peacocking, and that’s what the Met Gala is about.”

Yet it could read as tone deaf. The era, which spanned from 1870 to 1900, was also characterized by extreme poverty — with exploited immigrant families living in crowded, unsanitary tenements on the Lower East Side while Fifth Avenue’s titans dined on oysters and lobster in their Parisian couture (modeled, perversely, on 17th-century French court fashion). 

Rihanna donned a pope hat for 2018’s “Heavenly Bodies.”
Carlo Allegri/REUTERS

“The world is in a state of flux,” said Bronwyn Cosgrave, host of the podcast “Fashion Conversations,” citing the war in Ukraine and the uptick in violence in the US. “In New York City, where the Met Gala takes place, there’s huge problems with homelessness, problems with mental health … I’m not sure gilded glamour is what we need.” 

Others argue that it’s exactly what’s needed right now.

“When times are tough, people turn to fantasy,” Phyllis Magidson, a fashion curator who worked with the Museum of the City of New York, told The Post.

Carrie Coon plays social-climbing Bertha in the popular HBO series “The Gilded Age.”
Photograph by Alison Rosa/HBO

“Everybody’s battered, and what better way to escape than through period fashion?”

Some attendees, too, are embracing the gala’s gloriously gaudy theme.

“I think that dressing on theme is part of the fun of it, personally,” Katy Perry’s stylist, Tatiana Waterford, told The Post. “Katy always dresses on theme. But she’s always had a distinctive sense of style that lends itself to an over-the-top Met Gala look.” 

That said, even Perry plans to tone things down this year. “She won’t look kooky, but it’s Katy, so there will be no shortage of drama,” Waterford said. “I wish I could reveal more but you’ll just have to wait and see!”

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Lily Collins shows off her French fashions in ‘first look’ at season two of Netflix’s Emily in Paris

Emily is back in Paris!

Lily Collins took to Instagram to share a ‘first look’ at her French fashions in the upcoming new season of the Netflix hit series Emily In Paris.

The 32-year-old daughter of musician Phil Collins will reprise her role in the hit show as American expat and social media savant Emily Cooper. 

Bonjour! Lily Collins took to Instagram to share a ‘first look’ at her French fashions in the upcoming new season of the Netflix hit series Emily In Paris

‘Finally, a first look at @emilyinparis Saison Deux!!! So excited to be sharing the screen with this incredible cast,’ Collins wrote in a gushing social media post.

Adding: ‘Can’t wait for you guys to see everything that’s coming. You’re in for a real treat. Until then, bisous bisous!!….’

The brunette beauty shared a series of snaps from the upcoming season, showcasing some of her character’s jaw-dropping fashion choices.

Collins posed in a cornflower blue ruffled high-low dress in the first photo alongside her besties in the show.

Season two: American expat and social media savant Emily Cooper returns for a new season and with all-new French and retro inspired fashions

Oui, oui: In season two it seems Emily is fully embracing classic French style. She appears in a mustard yellow beret at one point – which matches a leather Prada purse

Ashley Park dazzled in a school bus yellow ruffled bra top with a wide brim hat and purple high waisted shorts and Camille Razat looked chic in a white double breasted suit dress with pink sunglasses.

Legendary costume designer Patricia Field, who was responsible for the groundbreaking style in Sex and the City, has lent her talents to the Netflix show. Emily’s ensembles in season one were headline making and – according to some – the best part of the series.

In season two it seems Emily is fully embracing classic French style. She appears in a mustard yellow beret at one point – which matches a leather Prada purse.

Another scene shows the American transplant talking to her tough French boss played by Philippine Leroy-Beaulieu wearing a French classic, a black and white striped sweater.

Iconic: Legendary costume designer Patricia Field, who was responsible for the groundbreaking style in Sex and the City, has lent her talents to the Netflix show

‘Can’t wait for you guys to see everything that’s coming. You’re in for a real treat. Until then, bisous bisous!!….’

Retro vibes are embraced this season as well with Collins rocking her brunette hair styled into a 60s era bouffant with a silky white headband and mod button up dress featuring an orange pattern.

She is posed with newcomer to the show, Lucien Laviscount, who will play Emily’s new love interest, Alfie.

‘Now more entrenched in her life in Paris, Emily’s getting better at navigating the city but still struggling with the idiosyncrasies of French life,’ reads the season two logline, as reported by TVLine. 

‘After stumbling into a love triangle with her neighbor and her first real French friend, Emily is determined to focus on her work — which is getting more complicated by the day. In French class, she meets a fellow expat who both infuriates and intrigues her.’

On camera: The show co-stars Ashley Park, Philippine Leroy-Beaulieu, Lucas Bravo, Samuel Arnold, Camille Razat, and Bruno Gouery

‘Now more entrenched in her life in Paris, Emily’s getting better at navigating the city but still struggling with the idiosyncrasies of French life,’ reads the season two logline, as reported by TVLine.

Though season one of the series was nominated for several Golden Globes, the show baffled many fans and angered some actual Paris critics who dubbed the show ‘cliche.’

French commentators slammed the offering for including seemingly every over done trope and trait about French people in the show.

Lily and her castmates announced the production had begun on season two on back in the spring with a fun Instagram video.

Fans love it! Though season one of the series was nominated for several Golden Globes, the show baffled many fans and angered some actual Paris critics who dubbed the show ‘cliche’

‘Annnd we’re back! Beyond excited to officially be back filming saison deux of @emilyinparis!! More to come. A LOT more!’ Lily captioned the post. 

The show co-stars Ashley Park, Philippine Leroy-Beaulieu, Lucas Bravo, Samuel Arnold, Camille Razat, and Bruno Gouery.

Collins had just wrapped filming for season two in August when she pivoted her attention to her personal life.

She and her new husband Charlie McDowell married during a private ceremony in Dunton Hot Springs, Colorado, earlier this month. 

Happy together: Lily and her new husband Charlie McDowell married during a private ceremony in Dunton Hot Springs, Colorado, earlier this month

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