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  • Marina Abramovic’s Erotic Epic Spreads Wide (and Displays the Limits of) the Artist’s Psyche

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    Balkan Erotic Epic is Abramović’s largest performance work to date, with a cast of more than 70 performers. Courtesy the artist

    More than two hours passed before I surrendered to the plush black turf underfoot, slumping down against the towering penises rooted in a grove between two performances of Sisyphean end zone celebrations. One stage, entitled “Fucking the Ground/Fertility Rites,” featured five weary, wiry naked men joylessly thrusting into grassy hillocks with the intention of fertilizing the barren soil. A field opposite them, “Scaring the Gods to Stop the Rain,” served as a showcase for a melting pot of Balkan maiden-attired gymnasts of all ages, wearing anguished faces ranging from raging Maori war cry to the teary trepidation of a young Amy Adams. All of them repeated their skirt-hiking rite, jumping and collapsing, contorting and thrusting, while exposing their sex, undress rehearsals for an anti-raindance, a stormy showdown with the heavens above.

    That final confrontation is one of two climaxes, one fable, one personal, anchoring Marina Abramovic’s latest work, Balkan Erotic Epic. Performance artist Maria Stamenković Herranz is cast in the role of Abramovic’s late unloving mother, decorated Yugoslavia People’s Army officer Danica Rosic. Here, she navigates her daughter’s tortured psyche, manifested as thirteen stages of Balkan folklore rooted in love, marriage, death, sex and power, dated from medieval times through the Cold War and interpreted in film, animation, music, dancing and milk bathing. The four-hour performance continues long after Danica succumbs to the sexual liberation Abramovic impresses upon her mother’s spirit.

    I couldn’t check my phone to be sure of what time I finally settled in among the cross-legged and collapsed—ticket holders were required to lock their phones in a pouch before entering the Warehouse at Aviva Studios, where Balkan Erotic Epic premiered in Manchester this October ahead of Frieze London. The North American premiere will take place at New York’s Park Avenue Armory next December.

    A photograph shows Marina Abramovic standing in a dark room with one arm raised, while a performer dressed in black sits at a table nearby and a portrait of Josip Broz Tito framed with string lights hangs on the wall behind her as part of Balkan Erotic Epic.A photograph shows Marina Abramovic standing in a dark room with one arm raised, while a performer dressed in black sits at a table nearby and a portrait of Josip Broz Tito framed with string lights hangs on the wall behind her as part of Balkan Erotic Epic.
    Marina Abramovic and Kath Fitzgibbon. Photo: Marco Anelli

    Support staff had two jobs. One, spot-checking guests to ensure their phones were locked up and two, making sure no audience members encroached on the steps leading to “The Kafana Complex,” an open-plan “pub, restaurant, music venue and public living room,” where avatars of the late Yugoslavian dictator Josip Broz Tito’s grieving widow, all of them resembling a caricature of Abramovic if she were drawn by The Far Side cartoonist Gary Larson, sat emotionally unmoved and physically paralyzed, clutching their handbags.

    There’s no ambiguity about what will eventually take place here before the night is over; the program promises Rosic will find a release she never found in life. “My mother was extremely difficult,” Abramovic told the assembled audience ahead of the performance. “I was forty years old and I asked her, “why do you never kiss me?” She said, “why should I kiss you? I would spoil you.” She wanted to make a warrior of me. She never felt emotions, love, sexual desire. I need to liberate my mother from all this so I can move on after this piece with a different part of my life.”

    The problem here, in this show where women whose natural eroticism was trapped across time in ritual, is Abramovic commits her mother to the same fate. No woman here knows liberation and the sexual liberation Abramovic imposes upon her is nonconsensual, an analog Black Mirror moment that brings to mind a new A.I. app that’s made headlines this week—2Wai—which allows for users to record themselves, submitting their voice and body to create a virtual avatar that can be used in the future, per the company’s own example, for a deceased grandmother to speak to their grandchildren. If we wonder what nefarious end these avatars might meet, we only look to Abramovic exposing her mother to endless looping eroticism she chose not to experience in real life.

    “No phone,” ushers would shrug when I inquired about the time, before I caught one sporting a wristwatch. She informed me I still had another hour and a half to go before a sudden rainfall started then stopped, after succumbing to the fearsome power of women’s bodies. However, the audience seemed eager to move on. Hundreds of attendees peeled off before the night was over, treating the show as more of a gallery space than a performance space despite Abramovic doing her best ahead of time to assure the conclusion was worth the wait.

    An image shows a woman in traditional Balkan clothing tending to another woman lying on a decorated bed, while a large projected video of an elaborately painted face fills the wall behind them in a staged scene from Balkan Erotic Epic.An image shows a woman in traditional Balkan clothing tending to another woman lying on a decorated bed, while a large projected video of an elaborately painted face fills the wall behind them in a staged scene from Balkan Erotic Epic.
    Natalia Leniartek and Saskia Roy. Photo: Marco Anelli

    “Wait for the rain,” Abramovic said. The night began with the artist occupying a stage in the Aviva lobby, reading the audience into the performance, a cheat sheet for those who didn’t spring for the cost of the program despite the attendees picking bare the gift shop walls of assorted merch—aprons, throw pillows—that didn’t always give the correct impression of a show about Balkan folklore nor embody its intended themes. One bestselling tee shirt featured a program illustration of Abramovic flying on a bridled winged penis, but the show feels devoid of triumph. The show only demonstrates that ritual wears down men and women alike.

    “Six pounds for a program is too high a price—it’s not my fault,” Abramovic acknowledged during her pep rally. “I’ll take a look at it, because it’s important for you to see each ritual and what it means. We’re showing thirteen different moments in this space, like thirteen children giving birth at the same time.” And she wasn’t kidding. “A friend told me the other day, you create space that looks like Balkan and smells like Balkan—that’s a big compliment.”

    Balkan Erotic Epic won’t always be staged like this however, nor was it intended to be, according to Aviva Studios’ artistic director John McGrath. “[Marina] came to the press night for Free Your Mind,” he told Observer, referring to Manchester native son Danny Boyle’s 2023 modern dance interpretation of The Matrix, which opened Aviva Studios’ inaugural season. “But she’d been looking at the venue even earlier. We’d been in conversation since she visited during the 2019 Manchester International Festival and it was in 2022 or 2023 that she shared Balkan Erotic Epic as a broad idea.”

    At that time, McGrath said, Abramovic imagined a seated show. She had just completed The Seven Deaths of Maria Callas on opera stages and considered continuing to explore that format. But after hosting a spring 2023 workshop in Manchester, the scenes evolved, exiting Aviva’s theater for its Warehouse space. In the future, a sequential stage version is planned for Barcelona, while performances in Germany and in New York will receive the multi-stage Manchester production.

    Those performances will likely have one site-specific element that defines them. Here, performance artist Elke Luyten plays a Flemish anthropologist outfitted in a white lab coat. She silently holds court in erection alley before intermittently sharing her own takes on “Balkan Magic” while seemingly ad-libbing takes on Manchester’s weather, environment and population.

    An image shows a pregnant woman in a sheer red dress standing in a tiled bathing area with her arms outstretched while another woman in traditional clothing pours liquid over her from a plastic jug in a ritual scene from Balkan Erotic Epic.An image shows a pregnant woman in a sheer red dress standing in a tiled bathing area with her arms outstretched while another woman in traditional clothing pours liquid over her from a plastic jug in a ritual scene from Balkan Erotic Epic.
    Rowena Gander and Vanda Hagan. Photo: Marco Anelli

    “She doesn’t understand shit about Balkan and she is confused,” Abramovic said of the character, comic relief breaking up the trauma of a nearby grieving bride tasked to marry a dead groom, a mourning dance at times set to opera and instruments that proves the most emotionally and physically taxing of the thirteen performances.

    Luyten’s performance meanwhile had the effect of an alarm clock blaring news radio, interrupting Abramovic’s dream with a reminder of when and where we are. She’s trying to wake up Abramovic—a bit player here, coming and going from the pub stage at her leisure—to the reality her mother is dead and this self-flagellating dream of closer intimacy with her mother is long beyond her reach. At the same time, Luyten doubles as a high art Krusty the Klown, ending her insights with the introduction of erotic cartoons.

    “The only way to show certain rituals we couldn’t show any other way is animation,” Abramovic explained. “There is no other way to show in our present time with all the restrictions we have in our society.” It’s a statement that comes across as lazy and dishonest.

    Animations included recipes for love potions and sexual healing (e.g., the 14th C. Bosnian ritual, “Wedding Day Protection,” in which a man makes three holes in a bridge and penetrates them to ensure he won’t be impotent on his wedding day). It’s an act no more scandalous to recreate than the naked men fertilizing the soil feet away from me. If others come closer to the definition of pornography, that doesn’t preclude the possibility of capturing performers on film. Balkan Erotic Epic also includes a cinematic component, including a wall-length choir of nude men maintaining various states of erection while singing.

    The 12th C. Macedonian ritual “Child Delivery” involves a man crossing his erect penis over his wife’s breasts to ease the pain of her childbirth, while a 15th C. Serbian “Love Potion” involves a recipe consisting of hairs extracted from forehead, eyebrow, armpit, nipple and vagina then mixed with menstrual blood and the prick of a woman’s ring finger. A 15th C. Kosovan act of “War Strategy” involves undressing and masturbating before enemy soldiers.

    “Everything was created in Manchester, filmed in Manchester, shown in Manchester and one thing about Manchester that’s very important—you’re the bravest, you show new things you can’t show anywhere else in the world. I don’t know if we will finish in prison or in daylight,” Abramovic said with some exaggeration.

    An image shows a performer in a white lab coat and black shoes sitting on a small platform adjusting her glasses, with two large sculptural phalluses rising behind her in a dark performance space from Balkan Erotic Epic.An image shows a performer in a white lab coat and black shoes sitting on a small platform adjusting her glasses, with two large sculptural phalluses rising behind her in a dark performance space from Balkan Erotic Epic.
    Elke Luyten. Photo: Marco Anelli

    Maybe she didn’t know where to look. Balkan Erotic Epic proved the highlight of Frieze London was in Manchester, but the roles are reversed this weekend, when London’s Barbican Centre hosts Dirty Weekend, an adults-only weekend of sexual liberation and community outreach, all-gender speed dating and fashion workshops, in conjunction with their new fashion exhibition “Dirty Looks: Desire and Decay in Fashion,” which runs through January 25, 2026. The looks on display, from Alexander McQueen to Michaela Stark, focus on aesthetics impacted by the natural grime of earth and our own bodies. You can even make your own tee shirt.

    When I first saw the animations in Balkan Erotic Epic, I immediately thought it a missed opportunity for Abramovic to partner with Four Chambers, U.K. porn performer, producer, director and sex worker advocate Vex Ashley’s decade-old video project that straddles art porn with A24 aesthetics, prioritizes female empowerment and has on occasion been more forthright in pushing the boundaries between sex and maternity than Abramovic’s Freudian wish fulfillment, an artist statement-cum-fetish to unburden herself of some childhood longing to glimpse her parents through a crack in the bedroom door.

    In Four Chambers’ latest film, Some Reddish Work, which premiered earlier this month, maidens dressed not dissimilar to the raindancers showed just how well they would have embodied the Balkan Erotic Epic universe. And for their effort, they aren’t shut out of legitimate art spaces but prove a draw. Their participation in the Barbican’s Dirty Weekend this November 29-30 promises to bring their “living archive that blurs cinema, performance, sexuality and fine art,” and Ashley will participate in a keynote panel on intimacy and censorship. Here, only the debate is animated.

    Marina Abramovic’s Erotic Epic Spreads Wide (and Displays the Limits of) the Artist’s Psyche

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    Adam Robb

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  • Tate McRae Is ‘TRYING ON SHOES’ With These Designer Recommendations

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    So close to what? So close to having a mental breakdown. Tate McRae (aka Tatiana) surprised fans with a deluxe version of her popular album, So Close To What. So Close To What??? (deluxe) features four new songs, including her surprise drop ‘TIT FOR TAT.’ Even though the Miss Possessive Tour has concluded, we’re still blasting all our favorites and these new songs: ‘TRYING ON SHOES,’ ‘ANYTHING BUT LOVE,’ ‘NOBODY’S GIRL,’ and ‘HORSESHOE.’

    In honor of the new album, we’re pairing the most outrageous designer shoes with each of the new deluxe songs. Also, we’d love to see Tate wear any of these on stage one day.

    Image Source: Courtesy of Whiteboard PR
    ‘TRYING ON SHOES’ – Miu Miu Satin Ballerinas

    Since Tate McRae is a dancer, we have to see her wear these adorable Miu Miu satin ballerina flats, inspired by real pointe shoes. They come in the cutest colors, and we want to own every single pair! We think Tate would go with the classic pink–what color do you like best?

    See and shop our selection for ‘TRYING ON SHOES’ here.

    ‘ANYTHING BUT LOVE’ – Golden Goose Ball Star Wishes Sneakers

    The second song on the deluxe, ‘ANYTHING BUT LOVE,’ inspired us to head straight to Golden Goose’s website for these red and white sneakers. The heel is the selling point with “love you” written on the back. Sorry, but we need these shoes in our lives, and we know Tate would look so cute with these on. Do these get the Tatiana stamp of approval?

    See and shop our selection for ‘ANYTHING BUT LOVE’ here

    ‘NOBODY’S GIRL’ – Prada Leopard Loafers

    These Prada loafers are giving the ultimate girl boss energy with a flair of that ‘Miss Possessive’ leopard print fans know and love. If you really want to get back at an ex, you need these platform loafers immediately. Yes, the price tag is high, but just think, what would Tate do (WWTD)? She’d buy these in a heartbeat! Tatiana approved!

    See and shop our selection for ‘NOBODY’S GIRL’ here.

    ‘HORSESHOE’ – The Alexander McQueen Hoof Boot

    You either love them or you hate them, but there’s no better pairing for ‘HORSESHOE’ than these Alexander McQueen Hoof Boots. They mimic a real horse, with a tail and everything, but just on your feet. We feel like Tate might just love these as much as we do. What do you think?

    See and shop our selection for ‘HORSESHOE’ here.

    What did you think about Tate McRae’s new deluxe album, So Close To What??? (deluxe)? Which of the new four songs did you connect with the most? Will you be buying any of these designer shoes? Let us know in the comments down below or hit us up on FacebookInstagram, and Twitter

    Tate McRae So Close To What??? (deluxe)
    Image Source: Igor Pjörrt

    Looking for what else is new in music this week? We’ve got it all, honeybee!

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT TATE MCRAE:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TIKTOK | TWITTER | WEBSITE | YOUTUBE

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    Alana

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  • Guess Who Was Born On St. Patrick’s Day

    Guess Who Was Born On St. Patrick’s Day

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    It seems the pot at the end of the rainbow delivered these gifts to happy parents.

    St. Patrick’s Day is know for the Irish, beer, cabbage, drinking, green and having fun.  For some, it is also about delivering there on treasure.  You don’t have to guess who was born on St. Patrick’s Day since we have a list here for you.

    RELATED: The Most Popular Marijuana Flavors

    Saint Patrick’s Day, or the Feast of St. Patrick is a religious and cultural holiday held on 17 March, the traditional death date of Saint Patrick the foremost patron saint of Ireland. n 1903, Saint Patrick’s Day became an official public holiday in Ireland. One of the longest-running and largest Saint Patrick’s Day parades in North America occurs each year in Montreal, whose city flag includes a shamrock. Celebrations in the US include prominent displays of green, religious observances, numerous parades, and copious consumption of alcohol.

    But this is about St. Patrick’s Day. So this isn’t about you…of course, unless you were born on St. Patrick’s Day, in which case, welcome! This post is about you. Here are the inordinate number of celebrities born on St. Patrick’s Day.

    John Boyega

    The is a British actor and producer has the been lucky with his success!

    Rob Lowe

    Lowe was has been the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow for fans since he hit the screens 1979 which the short-lived sitcom A New Kind of Family.

    Hozier

    This Irish musician, singer and songwriter truly has the talent of Irish. His music primarily draws from folk, soul and blues, often using religious and literary themes and a political or social justice stance.

    RELATED: Americans Want It, Some Politicians Prefer a Nanny State

    Gary Sinise

    Gina Holden

    Nat King Cole

    Mark Boone Junior

    Alexander McQueen

    Kurt Russell

    Katie Ledecky

    The American competitive swimmer made her own pot of gold. She has won seven Olympic gold medals and 21 world championship gold medals, the most in history for a female swimmer.

    Yanic Truesdale

    The Canadian-American actor best known for his portrayal of Michel Gerard in  series Gilmore Girls. Daily Variety named him one of “10 Actors to Watch.

    Patrick Duffy

    And a little Irish phrase as a takeaway.

    May those who love us, love us
    And those who don’t love us,
    May God turn their hearts
    And if he can’t turn their hearts,
    May he turn their ankles
    So we will know them by their limping!

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    Anthony Washington

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  • The Met Gala 2024 Theme, Explained

    The Met Gala 2024 Theme, Explained

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    Every year, on the first Monday in May, comes the most exclusive party of the year: The Met Gala.
    VogueEditor-In-Chief Anna Wintour hand-picks the creme-de-la-creme of the highest profile celebs — a coveted who’s who list of exciting new names and A-listers alike. Together, these celebs congregate at New York City’s Metropolitan Museum of Art donning (literally) their Monday best.


    On the surface,
    the Met Gala is a fundraising event hosted by Vogue to raise funds for the Met Museum’s Costume Institute. You have to be invited to attend (normally by a brand or by Anna herself), and what goes on inside the elusive Met Gala is one of fashion’s best-kept secrets. What happens at the Gala, truly stays at the Gala.

    @metmuseum DYK: When garments enter The Met collection, they can no longer be worn on the human body. So how can we understand the movement and energy of these masterpieces of fashion? This May, explore 250 pieces from The Met’s Costume Institute collection in “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion,” opening to the public on May 10 and celebrated at the 2024 Met Gala on May 6. Join us to see them spring to life. 🌿 🌸 🌊 #ReawakeningFashion #TheMetGala ♬ original sound – The Met

    Today, the buzz around the 2024 Met Gala officially begins with the announcement of the theme: Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion. And, like with
    any Met Gala theme, this needs a bit of explanation.

    What Does Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion Mean?

    In collaboration with the Costume Institute, every Met Gala also comes with an exhibit at the Met that’s curated to emulate the year’s theme. This year, 250 rare items from the Costume Institute’s permanent collection will be featured — including designs from Schiaparelli, Dior, and Givenchy.

    “Sleeping beauties” refers to the pieces that are so rare that they can only be worn once. Some of these “sleeping beauty” gowns, like an 1877 Charles Frederick Worth gown, will be shown via CGI and AI virtual showcasing.

    It’s an all-encompassing theme spanning over 400 years of fashion. The exhibit itself will have three “zones” dedicated to land, sea, and sky, according to Andrew Bolton, Wendy Yu Curator in charge of the Costume Institute.

    What Can We Expect People To Wear At The 2024 Met Gala?

    While your mind may have gone straight to Disney’s
    Sleeping Beauty, the Met Gala is going to be leaning heavy into how fashion and nature coincide. These pieces on display have been sitting in the Met’s collection for eons, some can’t even be hung upright or they’ll disintegrate.

    Since many of these clothing artifacts were made with natural materials (like a bodice made from peas in a pod), you will expect to see this mimicked in attendees’ attire. Sure, there will be 1800s-inspired gowns and lace appliques…but remember: nature is emphasized.

    People are thinking of florals and birds, as the exhibit will feature both a black tulle dress embroidered with blackbirds and an Alexander McQueen jacket inspired by Alfred Hitchcocks’
    The Birds. But everything nature has to offer — nothing’s off the table! We might see snakes and leaves and everything in between.

    And while we don’t know the hosts, or the guests, quite yet…we’re looking forward to this theme and hope we can reawaken the excitement of the Met Gala after some lackluster showings in the past few years.

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    Jai Phillips

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  • Yep, These Are the 7 Best Alexander McQueen Bags Money Can Buy

    Yep, These Are the 7 Best Alexander McQueen Bags Money Can Buy

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    “When I’m dead and gone, people will know that the twenty-first century was started by Alexander McQueen,” no truer words were said by the late designer. In many ways, the legacy of Lee Alexander McQueen is one that still shapes the world to this very day, as his desire to push the boundaries of our imaginations has cemented him into our collective memory. McQueen heralded from the bustling streets of London, where he began working as a tailor at the humble age of sixteen until enrolling in Central Saint Martins. After graduating, he founded his eponymous label in 1992, which quickly caught the attention of fashion insiders because of his avant-garde approach to womenswear.

    Unlike other designers at the time, McQueen didn’t shy away from theatrics—his collections often featured highly technical craftsmanship paired with darkly romantic aesthetics and theatrical runway shows. Although there was a great deal of attention surrounding the designer’s rule-breaking ready-to-wear pieces (rightfully so), the brand’s accessories were, and continue to be, just as noteworthy. Under the direction of McQueen, followed by his successor Sarah Jane Burton, we’ve seen the luxury house turn out some of the most coveted handbags of the century. It might be easy to assume that the buzz surrounding the house’s bags concerns its popularity among stars like Beyoncé and Lady Gaga, but that’s far from the truth. 

    Alexander McQueen’s bags have continued to accrue value over time, making them the perfect item to invest in for the long haul. And while there’s no telling what buzzy new bags will come out of the house following the recent appointment of creative director Seán McGirr, there are a few iconic styles that remain solid investments. In an effort to identify them, we decided to reach out to a luxury resale expert to have them give us the full rundown—luckily for us, Landyn Tedrick, the Site Merchandising Specialist at Fashionphile, obliged. Ahead, you’ll hear from Tedrick about her career, what to know when shopping for a designer purse, and, of course, a compact list of the 7 best Alexander McQueen bags. Trust us when we say, these purses will captivate the collective imagination for centuries to come.

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    Jasmine Fox-Suliaman

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  • Florence Pugh Looks Like a Badass Bride in a Sheer Lace Wedding Gown

    Florence Pugh Looks Like a Badass Bride in a Sheer Lace Wedding Gown

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    Florence Pugh is giving a metaphorical middle finger to the “no white after Labor Day” rule. On Sept. 5, the “Oppenheimer” star stepped out in a sheer bridal-white gown for the Elle Style Awards in London, where she was honored with the British icon award. Her halter-neck Alexander McQueen dress scooped low in the back and was covered in delicate floral appliqué cascading all the way down into a scalloped train. Pugh went braless beneath the see-through dress, giving us flashbacks to the fuchsia nipple-baring gown she wore to the Valentino haute couture runway show last summer.

    Assisted by stylist Rebecca Corbin-Murray, Pugh finished the look with white heeled sandals, pearl earrings and silver rings by Tiffany & Co., blue nail polish, and a spiky blond hairstyle.

    Just last week, Pugh spoke about her aforementioned sheer dress moment in an interview with Elle UK, revisiting the controversy it stirred up. “When everything went down with the Valentino pink dress a year ago, my nipples were on display through a piece of fabric, and it really wound people up,” she said. “Unfortunately, we’ve become so terrified of the human body that we can’t even look at my two little cute nipples behind fabric in a way that isn’t sexual. We need to keep reminding everybody that there is more than one reason for women’s bodies [to exist].”

    Despite the cruel body-shaming comments she’s received, Pugh continues to wear what she pleases on the red carpet and beyond. In the past year alone, the actor has made appearances in a plunging cutout Valentino gown, a sheer neon catsuit with a boob-window cutout, and a side-boob-baring polo dress. She also took the “underwear as outerwear” trend for a spin in a thong-exposing skirt at London Fashion Week and showed off her legs in tiny micro shorts at the Oscars. She’s truly left no daring trend untouched in 2023, and we love her for it.

    Take an all-angles look at Pugh’s latest head-turning style moment ahead.

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    Victoria Messina

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  • Sydney Sweeney Has a Vixen Moment in a Dramatic Plunging Corset

    Sydney Sweeney Has a Vixen Moment in a Dramatic Plunging Corset

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    Sydney Sweeney wore an outfit so undeniably reflective of her personal style when she celebrated her Variety Power of Young Hollywood cover at the publication’s party in Hollywood on August 10. While the photoshoot saw her in bright, ’90s-inspired cutout swimwear and platforms, Sweeney’s red carpet look, coordinated by Molly Dickson, was a step in an edgier direction. Sweeney sported a plunging, black leather bustier top and skirt from Alexander McQueen. The corset boasted structural peplum at the hem, and the skirt featured a dramatic leg slit emphasized by a zipper that ran diagonally from the butt to the upper thigh. Finished with metallic cap-toe pumps, a diamond-encrusted chunky silver hoop, and rings from Lady Grey, Mara Paris, and Ralph Masri, the asymmetrical look was head-turning, to say the least.

    All that being said, hair stylist Glen Oropeza balanced out the toughness with elegant, glossy waves; Melissa Hernandez employed silver eyeshadow and sweeping cat-eye liner; and Zola Ganzorigt painted on a cool, textured iridescent blue manicure. Sweeney looked every bit the star as she posed for photos with a copy of her own magazine.

    “@variety thank you for including me in the class of 2023, it was such a great night! and also i just wanna thank my incredible team who’ve been by my side since day one, and my fellow cast mates who are like family now 🙂 got so much love and appreciation for all of you,” she wrote on Instagram alongside a carousel of eight shots from the evening that include fellow actors Alexandra Shipp (who rocked a tailored Vivienne Westwood pinstripe set), and Dermot Mulroney. Ahead, see every angle of her special night.

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    Sarah Wasilak

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  • The 18 Best-Dressed Celebrities at the 2023 Critics Choice Awards

    The 18 Best-Dressed Celebrities at the 2023 Critics Choice Awards

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    Red carpet season rolls on, with the 2023 Critics Choice Awards bringing out the best and brightest of Hollywood for a night of awards — and fashion, of course. 

    The night’s big winners also won on the best-dressed front: Best Actress Cate Blanchett in a matching button-down and maxi skirt set from Max Mara, accessorized with Louis Vuitton High Jewelry; Best Supporting Actor Ke Huy Quan in a rich burgundy velvet jacket and black trousers; Best Supporting Actress Angela Bassett in tiered velvet ruffle Christian Siriano gown; Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series Sheryl Lee Ralph in a gilded Jovana Louis ensemble; Best Supporting Actress in a Limited Series Niecy Nash in a fit-to-perfection Jason Wu look.

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    Ana Colón

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  • Every Look From the 2023 Golden Globes Red Carpet

    Every Look From the 2023 Golden Globes Red Carpet

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    The Golden Globes are back, with celebrities ready to kick off the 2023 award show season with head-turning fashion. 

    Despite the controversy surrounding this particular stop on the awards circuit, the Golden Globes are set to attract a head-turning crowd, with nominations for films like “Avatar: The Way of Water,” Top Gun: Maverick” and “Babylon” as well as confirmed appearances from Rihanna, Taylor Swift, Selena Gomez and more. 

    See all the looks from the 2023 Golden Globes as they walk the red carpet below.

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    Andrea Bossi

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  • Belle’s Yellow Gown Gets a Fashion-y Update in ‘Beauty and the Beast: a 30th Celebration’

    Belle’s Yellow Gown Gets a Fashion-y Update in ‘Beauty and the Beast: a 30th Celebration’

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    Sure, it’s “a tale as old as time,” but Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast” actually turned 30 this year — a full Selena Gomez, for comparison. 

    So, on Thursday, ABC celebrated with a live-action and animated extravaganza directed by “Step Up” and “Crazy Rich Asians” auteur Jon M. Chu, headlined by marquee talent: H.E.R. as Belle, Josh Groban as Beast, Shania Twain as Mrs. Potts, Martin Short as Lumière and more. With clips of the original animation being interspersed with the stage performance, the costumes by Marina Toybina (winner of six Emmys, two of which were for “The Masked Singer”) helped create seamless continuity, while honoring the significance of the 1991 classic to ardent fans.

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    Fawnia Soo Hoo

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