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Tag: Parties

  • Riot Nerd to mark 10 years of niche fandom and queer-forward nightlife with two-room party at Underground Arts

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    February 08, 2026

    The Feb. 20 event will revisit a decade of fandom-driven dance floors alongside its annual ‘Twin Peaks’ takeover.

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  • Mount Airy is getting a 21-plus circus prom this Valentine’s Day

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    Prom is getting a second act in Mount Airy. This time, there are trapezes and a cash bar.

    The Philadelphia School of Circus Arts (PSCA) will host its first Adult Circus Prom on Saturday, Feb. 14, from 7:30 to 10 p.m. at its Circus Campus on Greene Street. The 21-and-over event transforms the former church space into a dance floor beneath aerial silks and trapezes, with circus artists performing short acts throughout the night.

    A live DJ will spin hits from the 1970s through today, while guests pose for printed keepsake photos and make their own origami corsages and boutonnieres. During one act, a performer suspended above the crowd will pour champagne into raised glasses, and a cash bar by Tired Hands Brewing Company will serve beer and soda throughout the night.

    The event is meant to recreate the fun of prom without the parts many people would rather forget. There are no cliques, no curfews and no judgment. It’s designed to be welcoming to anyone who skipped prom, felt out of place at theirs or simply wants another chance to dress up and dance. The school, which emphasizes accessibility in its programming, describes the night as an inclusive event where all are welcome.

    While the prom takes place upstairs, a supervised childcare program for kids 5 and older will run in the lower gymnasium. Children can take part in circus games, activities and a movie while parents stay to dance or head out to dinner nearby before returning to the party.

    Tickets are $35 per person or $60 per couple. Childcare is $30 per child, with a sibling discount available. Tickets are available through the school’s website.


    PSCA’s Adult Circus Prom

    Saturday, Feb. 14 from 7:30-10 p.m.
    PSCA Campus
    6452 Greene Street.
    Philadelphia, PA 19119
    $25 for individuals; $60 for couples


    This content was generated by PhillyVoice Media Events, not by the newsroom staff.

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  • Outside Parties is the creepiest Playdate game yet, and I’m kind of obsessed

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    Never underestimate the chilling powers of grainy grayscale imagery and ethereal whooshing sounds. Outside Parties asks, “What if I Spy, but in an alien hell dimension?”, and it is impressively unnerving despite the fact that nothing’s really happening at any given time. It goes all in on atmosphere, to great effect. This is the Playdate horror game that I’ve been waiting for.

    Adams Immersive’s Outside Parties is a sort of scavenger hunt across a massive image of a realm called the Outside, which can only be visited by astral travel, according to the lore. There are lots of unknowns about what or where it really is, though explorers have mapped it fairly extensively through out-of-body excursions and they’ve encountered thousands of different entities there, including the spirits of the dead. As the player, you have come across a Hellscryer K5 — the communication device, psychic camera and recorder used for these trips — and now you’re combing through the mission logs, getting sucked into the mystery of it all. Think of the K5 as your Playdate, except powered by blood and runes.

    At the center of Outside Parties is a 1.44 gigapixel, 360-degree panoramic HDR image which has dozens of eerie scenes hidden within it: skeletons of human, animal and paranormal origin; scary robed figures and occult symbols etched all around; what appear to be fountains and rivers of blood; a Stonehenge of teeth. These are the targets you’re meant to track down, and as you hone in and check them off your list, voice signals attached to each one will reveal more and more of the explorer’s spellbinding story.

    But this isn’t a straightforward “find the object” puzzle game by any means. When you first look at the zoomed-out photo, it’s akin to a strip of TV static with some heavily shadowed areas throughout. You can zoom to up to 64 times magnification to get a better look at specific zones, but you also have to adjust the image brightness using the crank to improve the clarity of the objects. Making it brighter or darker will reveal more objects in certain spots while simultaneously obscuring others. There are 150 targets according to the developer, which should take players somewhere from 10-20 hours to complete. I’ve been at it for hours and still have plenty left to find. (If you’re stuck, you can turn to the helpful target lookup page, which provides hints with varying degrees of specificity.)

    All the while as you’re hunched over your Playdate, laser-focused on the screen to find targets that are buried in a sea of fuzz, unsettling audio transmissions are cutting in and out, disturbing images are flashing on-screen at random and a constant atmospheric whooshing is playing in your ear. The sound design of this game is seriously brilliant — it’s worth playing for that alone, not to mention all the other cool stuff. From the startup page to the menus where you’ll find bits of a background story, to the creepy clips of people wailing and ominously reciting numbers, the sounds of Outside Parties make for a truly immersive, disconcerting experience that I previously wouldn’t have thought possible on a Playdate. It’s really something special.

    Outside Parties also comes with a screensaver that once again makes me yearn for the Playdate Stereo Dock. Pop on the Void Monitor, sit back, and enjoy the horrifying sights and sounds of the Outside.

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    Cheyenne MacDonald

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  • A K-pop dance party is coming to the Philadelphia Art Museum

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    January 17, 2026

    The after-hours event celebrates Lunar New Year with a live DJ and artmaking inspired by Korean art.

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    PhillyVoice Media Events

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  • Conspiracy theorist-podcaster joins crowded GOP race for Colorado governor, but will candidacy ‘go nowhere’?

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    A conservative podcaster who’s trumpeted false election conspiracies and called for the execution of political rivals, including Gov. Jared Polis, has formally joined the Republican race to become Colorado’s next governor.

    Joe Oltmann, who filed his candidacy paperwork Monday night, now seeks to participate in an electoral system that he has repeatedly tried to undermine.

    He is the 22nd Republican actively seeking to earn the party’s nomination in June. It’s the largest gubernatorial primary field for a major party in Colorado this century, surpassing the GOP’s previous records set first in 2018, and then again in 2022 — and it comes as the party hopes to break Democrats’ electoral dominance in the state.

    That field will almost certainly narrow in the coming months; four Republicans who’d filed have already dropped out. No more than four are likely to make it onto the ballot — either through the state assembly or by gathering signatures — for the summer primary, said Dick Wadhams, the Colorado GOP’s former chairman.

    The size of the primary field doesn’t really matter, he said, because few candidates will actually end up in front of voters. Eighteen candidates filed ahead of the 2022 race, for instance, but just two were on the primary ballot.

    On the Democratic side, a smaller field of seven active candidates is headlined by Attorney General Phil Weiser and U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet. Polis is term-limited from running again.

    For 2026, Wadhams counted only a half-dozen or so Republican candidates whom he considered “credible,” a qualifier that Wadhams said he used “very, very loosely”: Oltmann, state Sens. Barbara Kirkmeyer and Mark Baisley, state Rep. Scott Bottoms, ministry leader Victor Marx, Teller County Sheriff Jason Mikesell and former Congressman Greg Lopez.

    Wadhams said that other than Kirkmeyer, all of those candidates had either supported election conspiracies or a pardon for Tina Peters, the former Mesa County clerk now serving a nine-year sentence for convictions related to providing unauthorized access to voting equipment.

    Oltmann, of Castle Rock, has repeatedly — and falsely — claimed that the 2020 presidential election was not won by Democrat Joe Biden, while calling for the hanging of political opponents. He previously said he wanted to dismember some opponents to send a message, according to the Washington Post, before adding that he was joking.

    In his Dec. 26 announcement video, Oltmann baselessly claimed that Democrats, who have won control of the state amid demographic shifts and anti-Trump sentiment, were in power in Colorado only because of election fraud.

    He said Polis and Secretary of State Jena Griswold, along with 9News anchor Kyle Clark, were part of a “synagogue of Satan.” Polis and Griswold are both Jewish.

    In his announcement, Oltmann painted an apocalyptic picture of the state and said he hoped that three of its elected leaders — Polis, Griswold and Weiser — would all be imprisoned. He pledged to eliminate property taxes, to focus on the “have-nots” and to pardon Peters, whom President Donald Trump has also sought to release by issuing a federal pardon that legal experts say can’t clear Peters of state convictions.

    Oltmann’s decision to join the field is an example of “extreme candidates” from either major party “who file to run but will go nowhere,” predicted Kristi Burton Brown, another former state GOP chair. She now sits on the Colorado State Board of Education.

    She said the size of the Republican primary field was a consequence of Republicans’ difficulties winning statewide races in Colorado. Democrats have won all four constitutional elected offices for two straight election cycles.

    Burton Brown said it “might be a good idea moving forward” to require candidates to do more than just submit paperwork to run for office. That might include a monetary requirement: She said she didn’t support charging candidates significant sums but thought that “requiring some skin in the game” could prevent “unreasonable primaries.”

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    Seth Klamann

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  • Don’t have New Year’s plans yet? It’s all good: Here’s what you need to know in Charlotte.

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    On New Year’s Eve around Charlotte, there are many diverse ways to celebrate, ranging from lively parties to exquisite dining experiences. Many events highlight a blend of local culture, entertainment, and food.

    A notable event takes place at Brewers at 4001 Yancey, offering an all-inclusive night complete with DJs, a confetti blast, and a silent disco.

    Su Casa celebrates with an Afro-fusion dance party at Blume Studios, marking its 15th anniversary with global Latin rhythms.

    For a unique dining experience, Ever Andalo features a five-course Italian meal crafted by Chef Sam Sheehan.

    Nuvole Rooftop TwentyTwo hosts a party with stunning skyline views and a secret speakeasy for those who unlock the passcode.

    Michelin-recognized dining is an option at various Charlotte locations, with multi-course meals enhancing the New Year’s festivities, including at Counter-, where guests will enjoy a 20-course meal as a tribute to Salvador Dali.

    Among the places you can celebrate this New Year’s Eve is at The Ballantyne, A Luxury Collection Hotel, Charlotte. By Michael Freas Photography

    NO. 1: YOUR ULTIMATE GUIDE TO NEW YEAR’S EVE PARTIES, DINNERS AND MORE AROUND CHARLOTTE

    Charlotte is ready to ring in 2026 in style, and there’s a party for every vibe. | Published December 9, 2025 | Read Full Story by Evan Moore



    A sparkling toast is offered at Haberdish in NoDa, one of the Michelin Guide’s recommended Charlotte restaurants hosting New Year’s Eve events. By Courtesy of Haberdish

    NO. 2: CELEBRATE NEW YEAR’S EVE AT A MICHELIN-RECOGNIZED CHARLOTTE RESTAURANT

    For a twist on a traditional New Year’s Eve celebration this year, why not celebrate in a way that’s oh-so-2025: | Published December 16, 2025 | Read Full Story by Melissa Oyler

    The summary above was drafted with the help of AI tools and edited by journalists in our News division. All stories listed were reported, written and edited by McClatchy journalists.

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  • When Paris Hilton Partied Like Marie Antoinette

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    But actually, it didn’t. Months later, in May, Hilton hosted a final bash at London’s iconic Stork Rooms, arriving in what became one of the most defining looks of the early 2000s: a backless Julien McDonald chain-mail mini dress and rhinestone choker. This was the night that produced the now-legendary Paris Hilton glitterati shot—the one that would live on in endless best party dresses lists.

    Hilton was no longer on the club scene: She was the main event. That’s hot.

    In her memoir, Hilton herself calls her party tour “possibly the greatest twenty-first birthday celebration since Marie Antoinette.” She didn’t know it then, but in just a few years—like Marie Antoinette before her—Hilton, too, would go from “It girl” to scapegoat.

    Even as a frightened, 14-year-old child bride shipped off from Austria to marry a stranger, Marie Antoinette always had that je ne sais quoi. Though she came from enemy turf, the French court was instantly charmed by her beauty, style, and grace. Beyond Versailles, the public also adored her at first, seeing its future queen as a symbol of renewal, even rebirth, during the messy final years of the reign of Louis XV, best known for his (many) sex scandals, corrupt mistresses, and humiliating military defeats. In her book Marie Antoinette: The Journey—which served as the basis for Sofia Coppola’s 2006 film, Marie Antoinette, starring Kirsten Dunst—Antonia Fraser wrote that children “offered her baskets of flowers, and the daughters of the bourgeoisie, in their best clothes, strewed further flowers in her path.”

    As a young dauphine (wife to the heir apparent), nearly every aspect of Marie Antoinette’s palace life was informed by ceremony and performed for an audience. She ate, dressed, prayed, bathed, and later even gave birth in front of a crowd. A memorable scene in Coppola’s Marie Antoinette begins just after the title character has been roused awake by a swarm of ladies-in-waiting. Dunst shivers half-naked, desperate to get dressed, as one lady after another barges in, each ranking higher than the last entitled to present the queen’s garment—grinding the already painstaking Cérémonie du Lever (or rising ceremony) to a halt, all in the name of etiquette. The scene ends with Dunst muttering, “This is ridiculous.” In daily life, too, there were rules for everything—who could stand near the dauphine; who could speak, sit, or even breathe in her presence. Versailles was a cage, and Marie Antoinette was trapped inside.

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  • Mary Boone, Art Scene Queen, Looks Back at Her Life in Parties

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    In 1977, Mary Boone paid about $1,700 a month to rent a gallery space in SoHo to show relatively unknown artists. Within a few years, her eponymous gallery and the artists she championed, including Jean-Michel Basquiat, Julian Schnabel, and David Salle, had ushered in a new creative era. Known as a no-nonsense dealmaker, Boone cultivated difficult geniuses, wooed pedigreed collectors, and accumulated a closetful of Chanel. But in 2018, after four decades in the art world, she was suddenly embroiled in scandal. Boone was convicted of tax fraud, forced to close her two galleries, and served 13 months in prison. She kept a low profile after her release, but that didn’t last long. In 2024, the band Vampire Weekend released a single titled “Mary Boone.” “[Lead singer] Ezra Koenig called me up and said, ‘Tomorrow we’re going to drop your song,’ ” recalls Boone. “It’s flattering.” Now she’s enjoying a comeback. On a recent Tuesday, the 74-year-old was at Lévy Gorvy Dayan, the uptown Manhattan gallery where her first curatorial effort post-prison has been on view since September. “Downtown/Uptown: New York in the Eighties” features work by the artists she helped launch. After prison, she says, “I thought I was never going to do this again!”

    Mary Boone pictured in 1956, at age 5.

    Courtesy of Mary Boone

    Born in Pennsylvania to Egyptian parents, Boone moved to Los Angeles as a child after her father died. In Los Angeles, she says, “it was like every day was Saturday. We lived by the beach; you were always in the sand.” Growing up, she discovered she had a talent for drawing. “Everyone encouraged me to become an artist.”

    Boone with Michael Werner.

    Courtesy of Mary Boone

    Boone married the German art dealer Michael Werner in 1986. Their honeymoon, in Venice, overlapped with a professional commitment: One of Werner’s artists, Sigmar Polke, was included in the city’s Biennale. “It always seemed like the art world and our lives intermixed,” says Boone. Like her, Werner had emerged from a working-class background, and had earned a reputation for nurturing young talent. Though they divorced in the 1990s, the two remain close friends.

    Boone pictured in her SoHo gallery in 1982.

    Michel Delsol/Getty Images

    Boone studied at the Rhode Island School of Design. As a student, she caught the attention of the artist Lynda Benglis, who also lectured at universities. Benglis told her, “You can’t be in Providence—you have to be in New York.” Boone moved to the city in 1970 and hung out in the Max’s Kansas City scene, which was populated with the likes of John Chamberlain, David Bowie, and Patti Smith. Mostly, though, she found herself at the Odeon and the Ocean Club. “You’d go in, and there would be a table with Barbara Kruger, Cindy Sherman, Laurie Simmons, and Sarah Charlesworth. Then there’d be another group with David Salle, Julian Schnabel, and Ross Bleckner. It was just fun.”

    Ileana Sonnabend and Boone.

    Courtesy of Mary Boone

    Boone’s first gallery was at 420 West Broadway, which also housed the influential galleries run by divorced art world giants Leo Castelli and Ileana Sonnabend. “I used to joke that when the elevator was broken, which was a lot of the time, people would come into my gallery instead of going up to see theirs.” Both became important mentors and friends of hers. Here, Sonnabend and Boone celebrate their joint birthday in October 1981. “I was turning 30, and she was not turning 30.”

    Leo Castelli with his then girlfriend, the art writer Laura de Coppet (left), and Boone at art collector Douglas Cramer’s Los Angeles ranch for a party celebrating Boone’s wedding, in 1986.

    Courtesy of Mary Boone

    Castelli joined forces with Boone to usher in the neo-Expressionist movement of the 1980s. “Leo didn’t race to show my artists. I had to persuade him to do a show with me,” says Boone.

    Boone in front of the Berlin Wall in 1989, while on a trip to visit an artist.

    Courtesy of Mary Boone

    Boone met Werner in 1981 at the opening party for Norman Rosenthal’s landmark show “A New Spirit in Painting” at the Royal Academy of Arts in London. Many of Werner’s artists, including Gerhard Richter and Anselm Kiefer, were on display, and Boone wanted to exhibit them in New York. “I was too young of a dealer to show them, but slowly we started working together.”

    In 1987, Boone and Werner had their only child, a son named Max. After giving birth, “I just got a whim to have my hair cut off,” says Boone. “It was a lot of change becoming a parent. I was really lucky—I have a great kid.” Max has worked with both Boone and Werner, and recently struck out on his own as a gallerist.

    Mary Boone and Jean-Michel Basquiat.

    Image and Artwork © 2025 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. / Licensed by ARS.

    “Jean-Michel found out where Andy Warhol would go to lunch, and he went there and started selling drawings to everybody,” says Boone, who staged a Basquiat show in 1984. “I made it my business to meet him.” At top, Basquiat and Boone are pictured at that exhibition in Boone’s gallery. “He had a thing with his mother. I think I became a substitute for his mother, and Andy became a substitute for his father.” Warhol took the bottom photo in 1985, as Basquiat prepared for an opening. “He didn’t let the packers pack up his paintings. He rolled them up and dragged them.”

    “I always liked artists who did something I had never seen before,” says Boone. She originally turned down the chance to represent Eric Fischl, known as the “bad boy of painting” for his voyeuristic style, but she eventually relented and worked with him for 30 years. The two are seen here at the opening of his show at the Whitney Museum of American Art, in 1986.

    Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images

    Boone attends the 1990 launch party for Bob Colacello’s Andy Warhol biography, Holy Terror. She showed numerous Warhol works throughout her career, and he eagerly embraced her stable of young artists. “I think he really loved being the head figure,” says Boone. Warhol was the first person to show up to Boone’s inaugural Basquiat exhibition, together with “this man who was smaller than he was, and it turned out to be Manolo Blahnik. Andy tried to get him to buy a Basquiat painting, which was, like, $10,000 at the time. Maybe $5,000. Manolo said he was saving up his money to open a shoe store.”

    Boone and Nicole Miller attend a party in 1989 at The Lowell to celebrate Miller’s collaboration with Absolut Vodka.

    Patrick McMullan/Getty Images

    “Nicole Miller and I have been friends since our days at RISD. We moved to New York together.” While Boone rose to the top ranks of the art scene, Miller’s fashion brand established her as a household name in the 1980s. “I’m very loyal, and so is she.”

    Boone with Eric Fischl (center) and Michael Werner at Fischl’s 1985 solo show at Kunsthalle Basel.

    Courtesy of Mary Boone

    When Boone first moved to New York, she worked at Bykert Gallery, which was run by Lynda Benglis’s boyfriend, Klaus Kertess. “At around four or five, all the artists would start coming in, like Richard Serra, Brice Marden, Chuck Close, and Agnes Martin. Hearing these artists talk about art really was educational,” she says. Kertess left the gallery in 1975 to become a writer, and Boone decided to strike out on her own. “For every artist I ended up showing, I went to a thousand studios. Slowly, I put together a group.” Here, she is pictured with Eric Fischl (center) and Werner at Fischl’s 1985 solo show at Kunsthalle Basel.

    Boone attending a Christophe de Menil fashion show at the Palladium, in 1985.

    Patrick McMullan/Getty Images

    Boone’s first brush with the press had come in 1974, when a young Anna Wintour asked to include her in a Harpers & Queen story on stylish young New York women. “I told her, ‘Please don’t write about me, because I don’t want to be talked about in terms of my clothes. I want to open my gallery.’ ” Nonetheless, Boone paid attention to fashion. “It started with Armani. I, and a lot of other dealers, wore the low-key gray.” She developed a taste for Chanel when she found a trove of vintage couture suits in her size at auction. “I bought one or two. Tina Chow bought the rest of them, like, 30. Then Lagerfeld took over Chanel, and I wore that most of the time.”

    Boone and Julian Schnabel in 1980.

    Photo by Bob Kiss

    Julian Schnabel’s first solo show in New York, at Boone’s gallery in 1979, was a breakthrough for both artist and gallerist. Previously, Schnabel had worked as a cook at the trendy Ocean Club restaurant. (David Salle, another of Boone’s artists, also cooked there.) Schnabel’s plate paintings—literally paintings on broken plates affixed to a canvas—marked a break from the minimalism of the 1970s. “It was just something completely different,” Boone says.

    DAVID X PRUTTING/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images

    Schnabel’s defection from Boone’s gallery to Pace, in 1984, was her first major setback. “I was heartbroken,” she says. Here, she poses with Schnabel’s son Vito at his gallery show in 2008. “It shows you life is just a circle of events. Hopefully, the good outweighs the bad.”

    New York magazine and Vox Media, LLC

    A 1982 New York magazine cover on the booming art market named Boone “The New Queen of the Art Scene.” The city had emerged from bankruptcy, and suddenly money was flowing into the art world. The article painted Boone as a new type of gallerist, one always ready to pour a glass of champagne or make 10 phone calls to close a sale. “I kind of blocked it out,” she says. “I became a symbol. But, listen, a lot of young women, like Thelma Golden, came up to me and said, ‘I wanted to go into the arts because of seeing that cover.’ ” She credits Wintour, then working as New York’s fashion editor, for her inclusion.

    Fairchild Archive/Penske Media via Getty Images

    In the 1980s, a magazine asked a selection of gallerists how they celebrated a big sale. Most said with champagne or food. Boone said she bought a new pair of shoes. Her reputation as a shoe lover has followed her ever since. “Someone told me Warhol read that. Then I got my first invitation to lunch at the Factory,” she says. “I do like shoes, because they’re about moving forward. And particularly being a woman in what was still a man’s world, it was like taking steps.”

    Boone with Parker Posey and Posey in the film Basquiat.

    Left: Marion Curtis/Starpix/Shutterstock. Right: Eleventh Street Prod/Miramax/Kobal/Shutterstock

    Parker Posey with Boone, played a fictionalized version of the gallerist in Schnabel’s 1996 film, Basquiat (right). Boone likes to separate herself from the character: “Parker asked me some things, but she pretty much did her own thing.” Even so, Boone is a fan of both the actor (“I wish she could play me in real life”) and the film. “This is Julian’s story about what he thinks of me, Jean-Michel, and himself. It’s a good movie because he’s a painter. A lot of the problem with movies about artists is believability.”

    Courtesy of Lévy Gorvy Dayan, photos by Elisabeth Bernstein

    Initially, Boone and her band of artists were dismissed as a fad. “I never really listened to that,” says Boone. “I just had to keep doing serious shows.” Her 2025 exhibition at Lévy Gorvy Dayan presents the people she worked with as the definitive 1980s American artists.

    Boone with collector Stan Cohen on opening night of her 2025 exhibition.

    Courtesy of Mary Boone

    The exhibition includes a Barbara Kruger silkscreen bearing the phrase: what me worry? “I’ve shown that work three different times, and it’s never looked as good as it does here.”

    Boone with Pharrell Williams and the artist KAWS in 2013.

    Neil Rasmus/BFA/Shutterstock

    The VIPs who have shown up to Boone’s galleries on opening night include Steve Martin, Monica Lewinsky, Diane Sawyer, Bianca Jagger, Katie Couric, and David Bowie, among many more. Here, she poses with Pharrell Williams and the artist KAWS at the opening of a 2013 show she organized. Nonetheless, Boone never chases celebrities on opening night. “There should be a lot of energy focused on the art and the artists.”

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  • Manhattan’s Jewel Box Celebrates 95 Sparkling Years

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    New York’s grande dame, The Pierre, knows how to throw a soirée. Last night, the elegant Taj Hotel celebrated 95 years as a beacon of Upper East Side glamour with a ‘Red Diamond’ gala that brought together residents, diplomats, stars and influencers for an unforgettable evening of vintage Manhattan magic.

    Nearly 500 guests, from silver-haired luminaries to fresh-faced Gen Z tastemakers, donned black tie finery to toast The Pierre’s storied history in its famous ballroom. Sipping champagne beneath glittering chandeliers, partygoers were transported to a more gracious era, when the hotel played host to everyone from Elizabeth Taylor and Aristotle Onassis to Audrey Hepburn.

    The entertainment was a love letter to old New York: A Marilyn Monroe impersonator cooed while Deanna First sketched partygoers and professional ballroom dancers swirled across the stage in a swish of satin and sequins. Historic treasures, like archival photos and a $195,000 0.6-carat pink diamond, were displayed without fanfare (or security).

    Getty Images Deanna First.

    But while the gala paid homage to The Pierre’s glamorous past, the crowd reflected its vibrant present. Among those spotted in the sea of tuxedos and gowns: hotel residents, foreign dignitaries, reality TV stars, Instagram celebrities and even the odd baby or two nestled in couture-clad arms. The evening proved that after nearly a century, The Pierre can still create indelible Manhattan moments.

    Courtesy of Lola Tash Lola Tash and Jessica Wang.

    “I was transported back to the galas of the Gilded Age,” Lola Tash told Observer. The Canadian actress and brains behind the satirical, relatable meme account My Therapist Says was “reminded once more why New York is magical.”

    Getty Images Prince Mario-Max Schaumburg-Lippe.

    “The Pierre is my American Home away from home,” Prince Mario-Max Schaumburg-Lippe told Observer. His godmother lived in The Pierre, the prince said, noting “the happiest of my memories are right here” and calling the historic property “the hotel love of my life.”

    Courtesy of Grace Aki Grace Aki.

    Experiencing the hotel’s cinematic history firsthand was a highlight for Grace Aki. The gallery of treasures glowing behind glass displays made the night “all the more special,” Aki told Observer.

    “Like stepping into history,” was how Viola Manuela Ceccarini described the event. “The elegance, the legacy and the energy in the room—witnessing generations of excellence converge under that red diamond, a symbol of timeless prestige and the enduring spirit of New York.”

    Courtesy of Lori Altermann The star of the show poses with Lori Altermann.

    “Everywhere I turn, I see New York’s elite—beautiful celebrities and even Marilyn Monroe!” quipped Lori Altermann. “The fashion, the food, the hotel—everything is fabulous!” Altermann told Observer. “It’s a celebration of luxury,” said Namani Shqipe.

    Getty Images A Rolls-Royce awaits.
    Getty Images Guests enjoyed ice-cold Grey Goose Altius.
    Getty Images
    Getty Images Monica Danae Ricketts.
    Getty Images Evie Evangelo.
    Getty Images
    Getty Images Daria Matkova.
    Getty Images ‘Queen of Versailles’ Jackie Siegel.
    Getty Images Lorna Luft and Jill Martin.
    Getty Images Ramona Singer.
    Getty Images Andy Yu.
    Getty Images Sara Fivessi.
    Getty Images Kate Saucedo and Dymond Veve.
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    Merin Curotto

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  • Elle Fanning & Bill Murray Honor Sofia Coppola at the MoMA Film Benefit Presented by Chanel

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    The Museum of Modern Art and Chanel held their 17th annual Film Benefit on Wednesday night in New York City—turning MoMA, on 53rd Street and 5th Avenue, into a star-studded banquet hall outfitted with wine-red roses and long, tapered candles decorating the museum. In past years, MoMA has honored legends like Denzel Washington, Cate Blanchett, and Guillermo del Toro. For 2025, director Sofia Coppola was inducted into the gang. Lest anyone need reminding, the Academy Award-winning filmmaker is responsible for generation-defining movies like The Virgin Suicides, Marie Antoinette, and The Bling Ring.

    Of course, a Coppola in the building means there is a hefty guest list: Olivia Wilde, Elle Fanning, Lupita Nyong’o, Bill Murray, and Jason Schwartzman were all in attendance, along with Sofia’s husband Thomas Mars and her two daughters, Cosima and Romy Mars. (It was a true family affair—her brother, Roman Coppola, also came with his children and partner.) After taking photos on the carpet, Romy greeted Anna Sui warmly; the elder sister also chatted with Marc Jacobs and his husband, Char Defrancesco.

    Sofia Coppola, Cosima Croquet, Thomas Mars, and Romy Mars

    BFA

    Josh Hartnett and Lupita Nyong’o

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    Sofia Coppola and Elvis Costello, who performed during dinner.

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    The woman of the hour was, without question, Sofia Coppola, who hammed it up for the cameras with Schwartzman and Murray. Wilde, wearing a black velvet column dress, recalled her earliest memories of the filmmaker. “Probably The Virgin Suicides, which provided young women roles that were singular characters,” she said. “And then Lost in Translation became endemic to our generation—the depiction of loneliness was unmatched, still is. She understands the very-difficult-to-describe feeling of a very hollow aloneness, even if you’re surrounded by people. No one else can depict that like Sofia.”

    Fala Chen, Sofia Coppola, Lupita Nyong’o, and Rose Byrne.

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    Jason Schwartzman and Bill Murray

    BFA

    In his speech, Murray also referred to Coppola’s ability to capture “a metaphysical loneliness.” Schwartzman, who is Coppola’s cousin and spoke alongside Roman, recalled his childhood being introduced to “new bands, books, and magazines,” by the ever-cool Sofia. Elle Fanning spoke of her first time meeting the director: “I was 11 years old—no training bra needed. I picked out jeans, and a sparkly retainer that I often clicked in and out when I was nervous.” After begging her grandmother to see Marie Antoinette in the theater, Fanning got the chance to work with Coppola in Somewhere followed by the period drama The Beguiled alongside Kirsten Dunst, Nicole Kidman, and Colin Farrell. “She made me feel valued,” Fanning said. “I always say, I didn’t go to college, but I went to New Orleans with Sof, Kirsten, and Nicole!”

    While accepting her honors, Coppola looked back on almost three decades of work and thanked her “film family” for giving her a chance. “When I started, I was in my 20s and it was the ’90s L.A. where I was known as the ‘daughter of…’” she said. “This was before nepo babies were charming and most of them ended up in rehab. And I was the amateur actress who singlehandedly ruined The Godfather films. Most people didn’t think I had something to say that mattered but I found a few that did.” Next year, she noted to W, will be the 20th anniversary of Marie Antoinette. “We’re planning some stuff around that, and I hope to re-release it,” she said. “I’ve just been making stuff. I can’t believe that I have a body of work. It’s surreal.”

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  • The Glamorous History of The Pierre: Manhattan’s Iconic Hotel Turns 95

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    When The Pierre Hotel opened its doors in 1930, it instantly became a playground for Manhattan’s elite. Over the past 95 years, this iconic hotel has witnessed everything from the repeal of Prohibition to jewel heists and Hollywood scandals, all while maintaining its reputation as one of New York’s most glamorous destinations. From its $15 million debut to hosting Hollywood royalty and surviving the Great Depression, The Pierre has remained a beacon of glamour in the heart of New York City since 1930.

    A Complete History of The Pierre Hotel

    Image by Nextrecord Archives / G

    The Early Days: A Playground for Manhattan’s Elite

    When The Pierre Hotel opened on October 1, 1930, casting its 714-room shadow over Central Park, it instantly became the playground for Manhattan’s elite. Merely four months later, E.B. White’s Ballad of the Hotel Pierre was published in the New Yorker, describing it as home to “The little band that nothing daunts/this year’s most popular debutantes.” This was true. Prospective debutantes had started booking the ballroom for their November entrances in June, months before the luxury hotel opened. 

    Gabrielle ‘Coco’ Chanel posing in her suite at The Pierre during her first visit to New York City, on March 10, 1931.
    Getty Images

    Within a year, the film and stage star Ina Claire was sinking into a club chair at the hotel as she discussed with journalists whether she would be divorcing John Gilbert. (She claimed she would not. She would.) In 1932, Coco Chanel called The Pierre home during her first visit to New York. And that same year, the famed “Tobacco King” Arthur Mower refused to leave his Pierre bed for his stepdaughter’s early morning wedding . 

    Little wonder no one wanted to leave. Every inch of the 41-story hotel offered an almost otherworldly spectacle. The 60-by-100-foot ballroom where those debutantes waltzed was paneled in mirrors flanked by rose marble columns imported from French quarries. The chandeliers above sparkled with traces of ruby crystals from the room that would become known for the “swankest presentation balls” given for the city’s “spoiled darlings.” Attendees might make their way to the Grill Room, which was decorated to resemble an “undersea garden.” Wall panels and ceiling murals replicated ocean foliage, and the carpet was woven with images of seashells and sea urchins. In the upstairs dining room, paneled in hand-carved French walnut, interspersed with gold brocade hangings, Auguste Escoffier, the father of French cooking, prepared the hotel’s first meal.

    Bettmann Archive Miss Elizabeth R. G. Duval, a prominent member of New York society, and Sidney Wood, a well-known tennis star, sit on the steps inside The Pierre in 1933.

    From Waiter to Hotelier: The Story of Charles Pierre

    But The Pierre didn’t begin in those gilded rooms. It began in a kitchen, with a Corsican waiter named Charles Pierre Casalasco, who learned the trade from his father. When Louis Sherry dined at the Savoy Hotel in London in 1903, the American restaurateur noted a young waiter watching him with eager attention. Casalasco was “awed by this former waiter who had become proprietor of a smart dining room in New York.” Sherry was so impressed with the waiter’s desire to learn more about the hospitality business that, when he returned to New York, he made Casalasco his assistant. There, the waiter quickly dropped his surname in favor of being known simply as Charles Pierre. At that time, it was almost a forgone conclusion that New York’s debutantes were introduced at Sherry’s ballroom. Charles Pierre, tasked with organizing these splendid events, became “the favorite of the younger set, married matrons and the dowagers.” 

    Smart set, Mrs. Robert Goddard and Mrs. Roland Hazzard, in front of The Pierre.
    Bettmann Archive

    When Charles Pierre opened his own Park Avenue restaurant in 1920, his devoted group followed him. In 1930, their social set husbands, like Walter Chrysler, Edward Hutton, and C.K.G. Billings, helped finance his dream, The Pierre Hotel, which reputedly cost a staggering $15 million to build. In retrospect, too much may have been spent on those underwater-themed murals. By 1932, during the Great Depression, a petition of bankruptcy was filed—but Charles Pierre was kept on as managing director to run the hotel. 

    Disciplined and knowledgeable with a European flair, Charles Pierre ran the hotel with aplomb.

    Penske Media via Getty Images

    The Return of the ‘High-Class Hotel’

    When the repeal of Prohibition came in 1933, he rejoiced. No hotel man was more excited by the prospect of liquor coming back on the menu again. He declared that Prohibition had destroyed American appreciation for wine—and really any liquor that did not come from a bathtub. Now, a “new generation will have to learn all over again how to drink.” He intended to outfit The Pierre with a wonderful cellar to teach them. He planned gala celebrations. People could now gather for cocktails at his newly opened supper club, the Corinthian Room. He promised, “The next few years will see the rejuvenation of the high-class hotel.” 

    A young woman enjoys the luxuries of room service at The Pierre in 1943.
    Getty Images

    He was correct. But sadly, Charles Pierre would never see the heights to which his hotel would climb. He passed away in 1934 at the age of 55 from appendicitis. He was too weak from an abdominal infection to be saved by medicine flown in from Florida in what was described as a “13-hour airplane race against death.”  

    But his legacy lived on in The Pierre Hotel.

    Bettmann Archive Joan Crawford at The Pierre on January 22, 1959.

    Celebrities like Joan Crawford and Claudette Colbert would flock there, as well as younger disciples. By 1938, following her father’s death, the 13-year-old heiress Lucetta Cotton Thomas was spending $1,416 a month (approximately $32,000 today) to live at the hotel. Eloise at The Plaza had nothing on her. By that time, the hotel belonged to oilman John Paul Getty, who quipped that it was his “only above-ground asset.” 

    In 1944, the hotel—and the room prices—were the subject of scandal. It was found that munitions manufacturer Murray Garsson had housed and paid the hotel bills for key personnel in the army’s Chemical Warfare Service in what was known as “Operation Pierre.” In 1942, the decorator Samuel Marx had redone the hotel’s dining room in red, white and blue, and commissioned murals of early American life for the Grill Room, so it was certainly a patriotic wartime pick. However, officers knew that, when traveling to New York City, they had a $6 daily stipend. As even young Lucetta Cotton Thomas could have told them, rooms at the Pierre cost somewhat more. Garsson may have received $78 million in government contracts, but was imprisoned for bribery in 1949. Still, no one at the trials said that they did not like staying at The Pierre.   

    Bettmann Archive Ginger Rogers gets her Daiquiri-toned French lace dress fitted by its designer, Richard Meril, in preparation for the “Prestige Award from France” fashion show at The Pierre Pierre.

    1950s Glamour and The Birdcage Bar

    By the 1950s, the hotel had reached new heights of glamour. Chief among the novelties was The Birdcage, a plexiglass bar suspended above the rotunda. It was splashily advertised as “a rendezvous for cocktails.” Charles Pierre, who once prophesied that people would flock to his hotel for drinks, would have been pleased.  

    In the coming years, the hotel would not only be home to the city’s toniest citizens, but Hollywood royalty. Joan Blondell noted that, when her dog “gave birth to seven puppies, the manager of the Pierre hotel assisted the vet in delivery.” Audrey Hepburn stayed there throughout the filming of that quintessential New York movie, Breakfast at Tiffany’s. During those years, she was feted at the hotel with a gala hosted by Countess Alexandra Tolstoy. The meeting would inspire one of her future roles in War and Peace.  

    Audrey Hepburn, who won Hollywood’s Academy Award for her performance in the film “Roman Holiday,” is ecstatic after finally receiving her Oscar at a special ceremony in at The Pierre. Sharing her enthusiasm is fellow winner William Holden
    Bettmann Archive via Getty Images

    The fact that in 1958 the hotel became a co-op, where guests could buy apartments, only added to its appeal. Especially as those apartment owners included Aristotle Onassis and Elizabeth Taylor, the thought of visiting New York from Middle America may have been exciting on its own. The thought of running into Elizabeth Taylor in the lobby of the hotel you were staying at was almost overwhelming.

    Penske Media via Getty Images Bill Buckley and Nan Kempner at an annual gala held at The Pierre.

    Jewel Heists and Fashion Royalty

    By 1967, the hotel underwent a transformation also fit for royalty. The new owner, Peter Dowling, commissioned Edward Melcarth to paint the rotunda’s iconic trompe l’oeil mural. Inspired by 17th-century palaces, Melcarth claimed that he wanted to “make people feel very special and important when they walk into this room. The figures are heroic in scale because I want to rehumanize man as an individual. We’re not digits on a computer card.” The people in the mural, accordingly, were not confined to the past. The painting features columns and Greek gods in recline, alongside “a hippie boy and mini-skirted girl” meant to depict a modern Adam and Eve. Rather to her surprise, Melcarth’s mural also boasted a depiction of former First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. (Kennedy asked to be removed from the picture. Melcarth accommodated by partially disguising her, but a discerning visitor can still spot her image.)

    Pat Nixon leaving The Pierre to go shopping.
    Penske Media via Getty Images

    Visitors would get a less agreeable thrill when burglars broke into the hotel on January 2, 1972. On that day, four reportedly well-dressed gunmen pulled up to the hotel in a limousine. They handcuffed a variety of employees and guests. After, they proceeded to clean out 47 safe deposit boxes containing approximately $3 million in jewels, before departing, again, in a limousine. The men were arrested within a week, and the jewels recovered, though police recalled it as being one of “the biggest and slickest hotel robberies ever.”

    Penske Media via Getty Images Karl Lagerfeld at The Pierre in the 1970s.

    The flurry of reportage around the jewel theft only increased the hotel’s allure to the fashionable set. In 1970, the designer Karl Lagerfeld, a habitué of the hotel, would say, “I discovered New York from The Pierre . . . Distances in the city were measured only by how far they were from The Pierre.” He did not have to go far to see his friends. Givency, Yves Saint Laurent and Valentino were all regulars—Valentino even bought St. Laurent’s Pierre apartment in 2007. 

    Getty Images Andy Warhol outside of The Pierre in 1985.

    Pat Nixon, not to be outdone by Jackie, had designers bring their creations to her while staying in a suite at the hotel. In 1975, Betty Ford went to see the first Chanel Fashion show in the country, held, predictably, at the hotel Coco herself had loved. By 1976, Jackie Kennedy was on the premises once more, this time with Valentino for his show benefiting the Special Olympics. Television Dynasty star Joan Collins showcased her hats at the hotel in 1985, with Andy Warhol in attendance. The hats were lovely, but did prompt a reporter to wonder, “When, besides for lunch at the Pierre, would someone wear a large straw hat?” This seemed as much an inducement for many to lunch at The Pierre as it was for them to do away with hats.

    Getty Images Richard Nixon at The Pierre in January 1969.

    The Pierre on the Silver Screen

    By the 1990s, the hotel again found itself connected to Hollywood, although this time in front of the scenes. Al Pacino twirled in The Pierre ballroom for the famed tango scene in 1995’s Scent of a Woman. The penthouse served as the Anthony Hopkins character’s home in 1998’s Meet Joe Black. And, following the $100 million renovation The Pierre underwent in 2013, it was featured in the heist movie Ocean’s 8. Considering its legacy, there could certainly be no more fitting hotel for a film about a group of well-dressed female jewel thieves. 

    Jacqueline Kennedy with American diplomat/businessman Sol Linowitz outside of The Pierre.
    Penske Media via Getty Images

    Ron Galella Collection via Getty Dionne Warwick and Burt Bacharach at The Pierre.

    Today, the hotel is celebrating 95 years, an admirable accomplishment in a city where new establishments seem to pop up nightly. Perhaps part of its success has to do with the respect its owners have shown towards its storied legacy. Right now, the restaurant offers a tribute to Auguste Escoffier, and the mural, lovingly repainted in 2016, ensures that the rotunda is considered one of the most romantic rooms in New York. The details and owners may have changed, but The Pierre remains as glamorous and beloved as it was by those long-ago debutantes and Charles Pierre Casalasco himself. 

    Getty Images A view from Central Park of the Pierre (left) and Sherry Netherland hotels on Fifth Avenue, Manhattan, New York City. Both buildings were designed by Schultze and Weaver.

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    Jennifer Ashley Wright

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  • What About A Cannabis Cocktail/ Holiday Party

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    Hosting a winter gathering? What about a cannabis cocktail/holiday party. It is the chic, hangover-free way to celebrate.

    As the holidays approach, dinner parties and happy hours begin filling the calendar — often with a predictable lineup of wine, cocktails, and morning-after regrets. But this year, a new trend is quietly taking over living rooms and lounges. What about a cannabis  cocktail/ holiday party? For adults looking to unwind without the hangover, low-dose cannabis beverages and mocktails are becoming the chic, health-conscious alternative to alcohol.

    RELATED: The History Of The Cocktail Party

    Think of it as an elevated gathering — literally. Instead of traditional cocktails, hosts are serving beautifully crafted “cannacocktails,” blending sparkling juices, herbal infusions, and precisely dosed cannabis tinctures or ready-to-pour THC/CBD beverages. The result? A relaxed, social buzz that’s mellow rather than messy, perfect for those who want to enjoy the season without derailing their wellness goals.

    “With so many people cutting back on alcohol or exploring the sober-curious movement, cannabis drinks offer a modern middle ground,” says Seattle mixologist Jordan Leary, who specializes in non-alcoholic bar programs. “They still feel indulgent and festive, but you stay clear-headed and connected.”

    Low dose is the key, most cannabis beverages today range from 2 to 5 milligrams of THC, about the equivalent of a single glass of wine in social effect. Many also include CBD for balance, producing a light body relaxation without impairing focus or energy. They’re now available in elegant packaging from brands like Cann, Wunder, and Artet, all designed for adults who appreciate design, flavor, and mindfulness.

    RELATED: Making Your Cannabis Dollars Stretch During The Shutdown

    Hosting your own cannabis cocktail party is simpler than it sounds. The key is intentional pairing and pacing:

    • Offer a mix of infused and non-infused mocktails so guests can choose their comfort level.
    • Start with lower-dose drinks (2–3 mg THC) and wait at least 45 minutes before offering refills.
    • Pair beverages with light bites — think charcuterie, roasted nuts, or spiced popcorn — to balance flavors and absorption.
    • Set a cozy vibe: soft lighting, seasonal playlists, and clear labeling for all drinks.

    And of course, safety first. Guests should plan transportation in advance, and anyone trying cannabis beverages for the first time should start low and go slow.

    Beyond just being a novelty, the cannabis cocktail party reflects a broader shift toward intentional celebration. People are rethinking how they socialize, and cannabis offers an inclusive, modern way to connect.

    So this holiday season, trade in the eggnog for an elderflower THC spritz, or a CBD ginger fizz. Your guests will thank you in the morning.

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    Sarah Johns

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  • Memory, Matter and Minimalism: Inside Dia Art Foundation’s 2025 Fall Night

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    The Dia Art Foundation’s annual Fall Night was a celebration of Melvin Edwards and Meg Webster. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    For more than half a century, Dia Art Foundation has redefined how art can be supported, exhibited and preserved—particularly when it comes to large-scale, long-term, or site-specific works that fall outside the confines of traditional museums and commercial galleries. On Monday (Nov. 3), its annual Fall Night once again celebrated that mission with an elegant dinner that drew a remarkable number of artists—far more than most New York institutions can claim—reminding everyone that artists remain firmly at the center of Dia’s vision.

    Observer spotted an impressive roster of artists shaping the language of contemporary art today, including a particularly smiling and socially engaged Marina Abramović (currently preparing for a major exhibition at the upcoming Venice Biennale), alongside Doug AItken, Tony Cokes, Mary Corman, Jung Hee Choi, N. Dash, Torkwase Dyson, Miles Greenberg, Rachel Harrison, Tehching Hsieh, EJ Hill, Anne Imhof, Suzanne Jackson, Vera Lutter, Nate Lowman, Jill Magid, Tyler Mitchell, Tiona Nekkia McClodden, Kent Monkman, Camille Norment, Precious Okoyomon, Nicolas Party, Howardena Pindell, Alan Ruiz, Martha Rosler, Gedi Sibony, Haim Steinbach, Amy Sillman, Pat Steir, Richard Tuttle, Cheyney Thompson and William T. Williams.

    The evening began with a cocktail reception and exhibition viewing at Dia Chelsea, where guests admired 12 + 2Duane Linklater’s first major U.S. commission. His monumental clay animal forms inhabited the space, evoking a primal connection to matter. These gigantic creatures seemed to emerge from an elemental prehistory, before and beyond civilization’s structural and rational constraints. In one of the rooms, a circular wall relief of swirling clay channeled a sense of cosmic gesture—an improvised cosmology unfolding in earthy motion, connecting the microcosm of human making with the broader entropic order that regulates all forces between energy and matter.

    The galleries at Dia Chelsea, 537 West 22nd Street, were also open for guests for a special viewing of an exhibition of work by Duane Linklater.The galleries at Dia Chelsea, 537 West 22nd Street, were also open for guests for a special viewing of an exhibition of work by Duane Linklater.
    The galleries at Dia Chelsea, 537 West 22nd Street, were open to guests for a special viewing of an exhibition of work by Duane Linklater. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Guests then moved to 547 West 26th Street, where long, white linen-decked tables awaited. Dinner began with welcoming remarks from Nathalie de Gunzburg, chair of Dia’s board. Next, a radiant Jessica Morgan, Dia’s director, then took the dais. “Paris was a blast,” she said, beginning her speech with genuine enthusiasm following her just-concluded art week abroad, where she opened “Minimal” at La Bourse de Commerce in Paris. The show, a collaboration between the Pinault Collection and Dia, brought part of Dia’s holdings to Europe for the first time, pairing them with a rarely seen selection of works from the French magnate’s collection. The show celebrated the aesthetics and philosophy of Minimalism while tracing its global evolution and enduring influence.

    The night’s honorees, Melvin Edwards and Meg Webster, both hold deep significance for Dia. Their concurrent presentations Upstate spotlight how each pioneering practice anticipated many of today’s most urgent artistic concerns. Artist Sanford Biggers delivered a heartfelt tribute to Edwards, reflecting on their shared Houston roots and the profound emotional and artistic bond between them. His remarks captured how Edwards has imbued the rigorous formalism of his welded metal assemblage—steel, chain, barbed wire, machine parts—with a uniquely human and political charge: abstract forms that pulse with the weight of history and memory, between oppression and liberation.

    Next, architect Steven Holl paid homage to Webster, tracing how her practice infused Land Art and process-based sculpture with a prescient ecological consciousness. Merging nature and culture, matter and energy, her works embrace the entropic principle of impermanence and transformation while prompting reflection on sustainability and humanity’s relationship with the earth. Webster’s art—poised between the elemental and the formal, the human-shaped and the naturally evolving—feels particularly timely today, as she enjoys a long-overdue moment in the international spotlight, from Dia’s Beacon presentation to her installations currently on view in the frescoed rotunda of La Bourse de Commerce.

    De Gunzburg (with her husband, Charles de Gunzburg) and Morgan were joined by trustees Sandra J. Brant, J. Patrick Collins, Carol Finley, Jahanaz Jaffer, Dana Su Lee, Sara Morishige and Cordy Ryman. The crowd also included collectors, philanthropists and cultural figures such as Amy Astley, Stewart Butterfield and Jen Rubio, Lynne Cooke, Lisa Dennison, Fairfax Dorn, Michael Fisch, Molly Gochman, Steven Holl, Stephanie Ingrassia, Hiroyuki Maki, Courtney J. Martin, Sukey Novogratz, Monique Péan, Loring Randolph, Scott Rothkopf, Axel Rüger, Salman Rushdie, Bernard and Almine Ruiz-Picasso, Olivier Sarkozy, Ivy Shapiro, Allan Schwartzman, Akio Tagawa, Ann Temkin, Helen and Peter Warwick and Sara Zewde.

    And of course, no Dia gathering would be complete without members of the gallery world who have long supported the foundation’s mission: Paula Cooper, Lucas Cooper, Arne Glimcher, Alexander Gray, Carol Greene, Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn, José Kuri, Dominique Lévy, Alex Logsdail, Siniša Mačković, Ales Ortuzar, Sukanya Rajaratnam, Thaddaeus Ropac, Almine Rech-Picasso and Kara Vander Weg were all among the evening’s guests. Below, we offer a glimpse into the night’s most memorable moments.

    Precious Okoyomon, Vidar Logi, Miles Greenberg and Marina Abramović

    Precious Okoyomon, Vidar Logi, Miles Greenberg, Marina Abramović.Precious Okoyomon, Vidar Logi, Miles Greenberg, Marina Abramović.
    Precious Okoyomon, Vidar Logi, Miles Greenberg and Marina Abramović. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Dominique Lévy and Sanford Biggers

    Dominique Lévy and Sanford Biggers. Bre Johnson/BFA.com

    Steven Holl

    Steven Holl paid his tribute to Meg Webster.Steven Holl paid his tribute to Meg Webster.
    Steven Holl. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Meg Webster

    Meg Webster.Meg Webster.
    Meg Webster. Bre Johnson/BFA.com

    Howardena Pindell and Ann Temkin

    Howardena Pindell and Ann Temkin. Bre Johnson/BFA.com

    Amy Astley

    A blonde woman in a dinner.A blonde woman in a dinner.
    Amy Astley. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Molly Epstein and Hugh Hayden

    Molly Epstein, Hugh Hayden.Molly Epstein, Hugh Hayden.
    Molly Epstein and Hugh Hayden. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Nicolas Party

    Nicolas Party.Nicolas Party.
    Nicolas Party. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Maynard Monrow, Julie Hillman and Lucas Cooper

    Maynard Monrow, Julie Hillman, Lucas Cooper.Maynard Monrow, Julie Hillman, Lucas Cooper.
    Maynard Monrow, Julie Hillman and Lucas Cooper. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Axel Rüger, Cathy Ho Lee and Scott Rothkopf

    Axel Rüger, Cathy Ho Lee and Scott Rothkopf. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Arne Glimcher, Milly Glimcher and Bernard Ruiz-Picasso

    Arne Glimcher, Milly Glimcher, Bernard Ruiz-Picasso.Arne Glimcher, Milly Glimcher, Bernard Ruiz-Picasso.
    Arne Glimcher, Milly Glimcher and Bernard Ruiz-Picasso. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Scott Rothkopf and Shelley Fox Aarons

    Scott Rothkopf, Shelley Fox Aarons.Scott Rothkopf, Shelley Fox Aarons.
    Scott Rothkopf and Shelley Fox Aarons. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Olivier Sarkozy, Eva Lorenzotti and Charles de Gunzburg

    Olivier Sarkozy, Eva Lorenzotti, Charles de Gunzburg.Olivier Sarkozy, Eva Lorenzotti, Charles de Gunzburg.
    Olivier Sarkozy, Eva Lorenzotti and Charles de Gunzburg. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Eliza Ravelle-Chapuis, Michael Fisch, Brooke Lampley and Sukanya Rajaratnam

    Eliza Ravelle-Chapuis, Michael Fisch, Brooke Lampley, Sukanya Rajaratnam.Eliza Ravelle-Chapuis, Michael Fisch, Brooke Lampley, Sukanya Rajaratnam.
    Eliza Ravelle-Chapuis, Michael Fisch, Brooke Lampley and Sukanya Rajaratnam. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Li Xin and Thaddaeus Ropac

    Li Xin, Thaddaeus RopacLi Xin, Thaddaeus Ropac
    Li Xin and Thaddaeus Ropac. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Marisa Murillo, Azikiwe Mohammed and Tiona Nekkia McClodden

    Marisa Murillo, Azikiwe Mohammed, Tiona Nekkia McClodden.Marisa Murillo, Azikiwe Mohammed, Tiona Nekkia McClodden.
    Marisa Murillo, Azikiwe Mohammed and Tiona Nekkia McClodden. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Akio Tagawa and Karen LaGatta

    Two asian looking people in a dinner.Two asian looking people in a dinner.
    Akio Tagawa and Karen LaGatta. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Sarah Gavlak

    Sarah Gavlak.Sarah Gavlak.
    Sarah Gavlak. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    David Israel, Maynard Monrow and Julie Hillman

    David Israel, Maynard Monrow, Julie Hillman.David Israel, Maynard Monrow, Julie Hillman.
    David Israel, Maynard Monrow and Julie Hillman. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Joost Elffers and Pat Steir

    Pat Steir, Joost Elffers.Pat Steir, Joost Elffers.
    Joost Elffers and Pat Steir. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    William T. Williams and Alexander Gray

    Alexander Gray, William T. Williams.Alexander Gray, William T. Williams.
    William T. Williams and Alexander Gray. Bre Johnson/BFA.com

    Paul Richert-Garcia, David Lewis and Barry X Ball

    Paul Richert-Garcia, David Lewis and Barry X Ball. Bre Johnson/BFA.com

    Dana Lee and Heather Harmon

    Dana Lee, Heather Harmon in front of a clay animal sculptureDana Lee, Heather Harmon in front of a clay animal sculpture
    Dana Lee and Heather Harmon. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Vanessa Yoa and Brandon Chen

    Vanessa Yoa, Brandon Chen in front of a clay sculpture.Vanessa Yoa, Brandon Chen in front of a clay sculpture.
    Vanessa Yoa and Brandon Chen. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Maynard Monrow and Stephanie Ingrassia

    Maynard Monrow and Stephanie Ingrassia. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Alex Magnuson, Jacob Proctor and Jillian Brodie

    Alex Magnuson, Jacob Proctor, Jillian Brodie.Alex Magnuson, Jacob Proctor, Jillian Brodie.
    Alex Magnuson, Jacob Proctor and Jillian Brodie. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Tehching Hsieh and Hiroyuki Maki

    Tehching Hsieh, Hiroyuki Maki.Tehching Hsieh, Hiroyuki Maki.
    Tehching Hsieh and Hiroyuki Maki. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Jessica Morgan

    Jessica Morgan. Madison McGaw/BFA.com

    Memory, Matter and Minimalism: Inside Dia Art Foundation’s 2025 Fall Night

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    Elisa Carollo

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  • It’s not a ‘scam’ that NYC mayor candidates are listed twice

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    Elon Musk, the owner of social media platform X, criticized the legitimacy of New York City’s election system as voters prepared to head to the polls.

    Musk shared a photograph of New York City’s ballot on Nov. 4, Election Day. “The New York City ballot form is a scam! No ID is required. Other mayoral candidates appear twice. (Andrew) Cuomo’s name is last in bottom right,” wrote Musk, who supports Cuomo over Democratic frontrunner Zohran Mamdani and Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa. Other X users made similar points in other posts.

    New York doesn’t require voters to present IDs at their polling place on Election Day, beyond first-time voters who did not present ID at the time they registered. For all other voters, poll workers confirm identity by matching their signature to official records. People are required to present ID when they register to vote.

    As for Cuomo’s ballot placement, the former New York governor lost the Democratic primary and created his own independent party to allow him to run in the general election. According to election rules, that meant the placement for Cuomo and his new party was further down the ballot than longer-established parties. 

    What about candidates appearing twice? There’s nothing fishy about that: It’s part of New York’s long tradition of fusion voting, in which multiple parties can nominate the same candidate. 

    Having a candidate appear on the ballot twice is “not a scam at all,” said Jerry H. Goldfeder, senior counsel at the law firm Cozen O’Connor. “New York has had fusion voting for many, many years.”

    How does fusion voting work?

    If a candidate receives more than one party nomination, voters must choose not only the candidate they prefer but also the party they want those votes to count for.

    In the 2025 mayoral election, both Mamdani and one of his opponents, Sliwa, secured nominations of two parties, so they are listed twice on the ballot. 

    Mamdani won nominations from the Democratic Party and the left-wing Working Families Party. (On Election Day, Mamdani said he voted for himself on the Working Families Party line.)

    Sliwa won the nomination of the Republican Party and a party he created called the Protect Animals Party. (Sliwa has attracted notice for having 16 cats in his 320-square-foot studio apartment, and he’s made animal welfare a key campaign issue.)

    Any votes for a candidate, regardless of the party line the vote is cast under, counts toward that candidate’s total. “Although candidates may appear on more than one party’s line, voters can only vote for them once,” said Julia Sass Rubin, a Rutgers University public policy professor.

    So why would voters support a prominent candidate on a minor-party line?

    They might want to send a message about the importance of that party’s positions. They also might want to ensure that the smaller party continues to win enough votes to secure a ballot spot in future elections.

    By allowing cross-party alliances, a fusion system allows smaller parties to be more than just a “wasted vote” or a self-defeating “spoiler,” said Dan Cantor, who co-founded the Working Families Party and now heads the Center for Ballot Freedom, which supports fusion voting. 

    “It allows voters the ability to vote their values and send a message to the candidate that he or she should be attentive to the minor party’s concerns,” Cantor said.

    Fusion voting’s long history 

    Fusion voting dates to the 19th century, but only New York and Connecticut allow the practice today. 

    Historically, cross-nominations were used to elevate issues including the abolition of slavery and enhanced political representation into the mainstream, wrote three legal experts for the American Bar Association in 2024. 

    In the close 1960 presidential election, New York’s 45 electoral votes were crucial. While Richard Nixon received more Republican votes than John F. Kennedy received Democratic votes, “Kennedy’s 6% support on the Liberal Party line delivered him the state and the White House,” the authors wrote. Franklin D. Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan also won New York by fusing with minor parties.

    Tabatha Abu El-Haj, one of the authors of the American Bar Association paper, said there’s an irony in Musk’s criticism: “Back when Elon Musk threw out the notion of forming a third-party, many commentators noted the only way that party could actually influence the direction of the Republican Party would be if it operated as a fusion party.”

    Our ruling

    Musk wrote, “The New York City ballot form is a scam” because “mayoral candidates appear twice.”

    Mamdani and Sliwa are on the mayoral ballot twice because two separate parties made them their nominees. This is how fusion voting works, and how it has operated in New York since the nineteenth century.

    We rate the statement False.

    PolitiFact New York Writer Jill Terreri Ramos contributed to this report.

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  • At the LACMA Art+Film Gala, Demna Hosts Hollywood

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    Claudia Sulewski, Finneas and Alex Israel

    Zach Hilty/BFA.com

    This mix of celebrity and art royalty aside, the gala is a bellwether for the world-conquering ambitions of LACMA, and raised a record-breaking $6.8 million to centralize film in the museum’s programming, and fund its mission at large. LACMA has long wanted to go toe-to-toe with its East Coast counterparts—namely the Metropolitan Museum of Art—and now it has a showstopper of a building, designed by Swiss architect Peter Zumthor, set to open in April of next year. And LACMA, with this gala, has real showbiz leverage, the support of Hollywood power players. Just look at the host committee, comprised of co-chairs Eva Chow and Leonardo DiCaprio, who were joined by Gucci Artistic Director Demna and Gucci President and CEO Francesca Bellettini.

    But Demna is perhaps is most telling. One of the most influential and controversial fashion designers in the last decade, he reimagined the idea of zeitgeist while at Balenciaga. The Pinault family—who also own Christie’s, and CAA—moved him to Gucci, which is a genius move on a lot of levels but, for our specific purposes here, quite wonderful for this particular event. Demna really likes hanging out with artists. At one point, sculptor and photographer Paul Pfeiffer went over to say hello, and Demna cupped his hands over his heart and said to Pfeiffer: “I love your work.”

    Demna told me he’s restoring a historic architecturally significant home in Los Angeles to live in. He’s also been homing in on the conceptual ideal of Hollywood to situate the narrative of the new Gucci. In lieu of a runway show, he commissioned Spike Jones and Halina Reijn to make The Tiger, a short film starring Demi Moore, Edward Norton, Ed Harris, Elliot Page, Keke Palmer, Alia Shawkat, Julianne Nicholson, Heather Lawless, Ronny Chieng, Kendall Jenner and Alex Consani. The result brought the characters from his “La Famiglia” collection to life.

    And then, to ice that cake, Demna hosted the biggest art museum gala in Tinseltown. It honored Mary Corse, as legendary of the West Coast light and space artists as you can get. James Turrell introduced her—he referred to her as one of his heroes, along with Rothko and Georgia O’Keeffe.

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    Nate Freeman

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  • Spotlight: Inside October 2025 Parties & Events in Los Angeles  – LAmag

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    Fashion soirées, charity galas, The Academy’s second biggest night of the year and more dazzled across the city in October. Take a look inside below. 

    L.A. Loves Alex’s Lemonade 

    Patton Oswalt and Meredith Salenger attend as LA Loves Alex’s Lemonade Stand presents the 13th Annual Food and Wine Event at UCLA in Los Angeles, CA on Saturday, October 4, 2025
    Credit: Benjamin Shmikler/ABImages
    Nancy Silverton, Billy Harris and Elizabeth Hong attend as LA Loves Alex’s Lemonade Stand presents the 13th Annual Food and Wine Event at UCLA in Los Angeles, CA on Saturday, October 4, 2025
    Credit: Benjamin Shmikler/ABImages

    The best cookout of the year unfolded at UCLA’s Royce Quad for the 13th annual L.A. Loves Alex’s Lemonade, raising $1.3 million for childhood cancer research over the course of the afternoon. Patton Oswalt, Blake Neely, Roxanne Gay and Carla Gallo were among the Angelenos in attendance enjoying food from the city’s top chefs, including Burt Bakman, Chris Bianco, Vivian Ku, Josiah Citrin, Ludo Lefebvre, Nancy Silverton, Suzanne Goin and Valerie Gordon. 

    HollyRod DesignCare Gala 

    HollyRod Foundation’s Annual DesignCare 2025 Gala
    HollyRod Foundation’s Annual DesignCare 2025 Gala
    Credit: Shutterstock for The HollyRod Foundation
    HollyRod Foundation’s Annual DesignCare 2025 Gala
    Isis King and Constance Marie
    Credit: Shutterstock for The HollyRod Foundation

    HollyRod Foundation founders Holly Robinson Peete and Rodney Peete held the annual HollyRod DesignCare Gala on Oct. 4. An evening of fashion, community and music, the event honored Don Cheadle and Bridgid Coulter with the Clarence and Jacqueline Avant HollyRod Humanitarian Award this year. Other honorees included Faith Evans, Vernon Jackson, Sumit and Viraj Dhanda and Frederick Anderson. 

    Rodeo Drive Celebrates Timepieces and Fine Jewelry  

    Thomas J. Blumenthal, Kathy Gohari, and Beverly Hills Mayor Sha
rona R. Nazarian, PsyD attend Rodeo
Drive Celebrates Timepieces and Fine Jewelry tribute to Thomas J. Blumenthal at Beverly Wilshire, A
Four Seasons Hotel.
    Thomas J. Blumenthal, Kathy Gohari, and Beverly Hills Mayor Sharona R. Nazarian, PsyD attend Rodeo Drive Celebrates Timepieces and Fine Jewelry tribute to Thomas J. Blumenthal at Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel.
    Credit: Jorge Meza Photos/ Rodeo Drive Committee
    Chris Gleeson, Reed Kandalaft, Beverly Hills Mayor Sharona R. N
azarian, PsyD, Thomas J. Blumenthal,
Todd Johnson, Bill Wiley, and Giorgio Cyphaeus Sease Rodeo Drive Celebrates
    Chris Gleeson, Reed Kandalaft, Beverly Hills Mayor Sharona R. Nazarian, PsyD, Thomas J. Blumenthal, Todd Johnson, Bill Wiley, and Giorgio Cyphaeus Sease
    Credit: Jorge Meza Photos/ Rodeo Drive Committee

    From Oct. 6 to 12, Rodeo Drive honored timepieces and fine jewelry craftsmanship and began the series with a reception on the Rodeo Terrace at Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel. The Oct. 6 tribute honored Thomas J. Blumenthal, president and CEO of GEARYS Beverly Hills, for his leadership in shaping the famed shopping district as a watchmaking epicenter.  

    Ramy Brook Women’s Brunch 

    Credit: Courtesy of Ramy Brook
    Credit: Courtesy of Ramy Brook

    On Oct. 8, contemporary womenswear brand Ramy Brook brought together The Bachelor‘s Kelsey Anderson, Selling Sunset‘s Nicole Young, Real Housewives‘ Jo De La Rosa and other L.A. tastemakers at The Maybourne Hotel Beverly Hills in celebration of powerful women in fashion and entertainment.  

    Angel Awards: Signature Chef Gala 

    Angel Awards 2025Credit: Courtesy Angel Awards
    Angel Awards 2025Credit: Courtesy Angel Awards

    Hosted by Chris Mann, the inaugural Angel Awards: Signature Chef Gala took place at the Santa Monica Proper Hotel on Oct. 16 to raise funds for Upward Bound House and its mission to end family homelessness. “This event proved that when culinary artistry meets humanity, the impact is boundless,” said Alexis Bodkin-Glassman, chief development officer of Upward Bound House. “We’re redefining what it means to give back in Los Angeles—one plate, one story, and one family at a time.” Attendees included actress Catherine O’Hara and the night’s honorees, the founders of Rustic Canyon Family. 

    The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures Gala 

    Bruce Springsteen and George Clooney
    Bruce Springsteen and George Clooney onstage at the Academy
    Credit: Photo by Emma McIntyre/Oscars/Getty Images for Academy Museum of Motion Pictures
    Lucy Liu, Penélope Cruz, Demi Moore, and Adrien Brody
    Lucy Liu, Penélope Cruz, Demi Moore, and Adrien Brody
    Credit: Photo by Stefanie Keenan/Oscars/Getty Images for Academy Museum of Motion Pictures

    The Academy’s most exclusive party happened on Oct. 18, where Adam Sandler, Addison Rae, Amanda Seyfried, Ayo Edebiri, Barry Jenkins, Baz Luhrmann, Benny Safdie, Bong Joon Ho and more from across the entertainment industry gathered to raise funds for the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures programs. Read more 

    Chrysalis Butterfly Ball 

    Da’Vine Joy Randolph attends the 2025 Chrysalis Butterfly Ball at The Beehive on Sat. Oct. 18th in Los Angeles, Calif.
    Credit: Jordan Strauss Photography
    The Action Figures at the 2025 Chrysalis Butterfly Ball at The Beehive on Sat. Oct. 18th in Los Angeles, Calif.
    Credit: Jordan Strauss Photography

    On Oct. 18, The Beehive in South Los Angeles welcomed a crowd of business leaders, changemakers and Hollywood players for a night of charity and camaraderie that raised over $1 million for Chrysalis, a nonprofit that assists people in finding job stability. Read more 

    Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere L.A. Premiere 

    AFI Springsteen: Delivery Me From Nowhere Los Angeles Premiere
    HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 22: (L-R) Bruce Springsteen, Patti Scialfa, Jeremy Allen White, Jeremy Strong and David Greenbaum, President, Disney Live Action and 20th Century Studios attend the AFI Los Angeles Premiere of 20th Century Studios’ “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere” at The TCL Chinese Theater.
    Credit: Photo by Jesse Grant/Getty Images for 20th Century Studios
    AFI Springsteen: Delivery Me From Nowhere Los Angeles Premiere
    HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 22: (L-R) Matthew Anthony Pellicano Jr. and Scott Cooper speak onstage during the AFI Los Angeles Premiere of 20th Century Studios’ “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere” at The TCL Chinese Theater.
    Credit: Photo by Jesse Grant/Getty Images for 20th Century Studios
    AFI Springsteen: Delivery Me From Nowhere Los Angeles Premiere
    HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 22: Bruce Springsteen performs onstage during the AFI Los Angeles Premiere of 20th Century Studios “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere” at The TCL Chinese Theater in Hollywood, California.
    Credit: Photo by Jesse Grant/Getty Images for 20th Century Studios

    AFI Festival opened on Oct. 22 with the Los Angeles premiere of Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere. Inside the TCL Chinese Theatre, director Scott Cooper introduced the film and his cast and collaborators: Jeremy Allen White, Odessa Young, Jeremy Strong, Marc Maron, Matthew Anthony, Bruce Springsteen and Warren Zanes, who wrote the book that inspired the film. After the credits rolled, Springsteen surprised the crowd by returning to the front of the theater for an intimate, two-song acoustic set. Between “Atlantic City” and “Land of Hopes and Dreams,” The Boss reflected on the turbulent state of the U.S., but ended on an optimistic note: “”For 250 years around the world, despite all the faults that we’ve had, the United States has served as a beacon of democracy and hope and freedom… those ideals remain worth fighting for.” 

    Neiman Marcus Fantasy Gifts 

    Neiman Marcus Celebrates 2025 Fantasy Gifts
    Leslie Bibb, Sarah Michelle Gellar
    Credit: Jason Sean Weiss/BFA.com
    Neiman Marcus Celebrates 2025 Fantasy Gifts
    Malin Åkerman
    Credit: Jason Sean Weiss/BFA.com

    Neiman Marcus showed off its ultra luxe Fantasy Gifts collection on Oct. 21 at Bar Marmont. Eva Longoria, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Ashlee Simpson, Evan Ross, Kathy Hilton, Leslie Bibb and more weaved through rooms dedicated to bringing each Fantasy Gift to life, including a Western-style bar in tribute to a Christian Louboutin custom saddle and a martini bar decked out with Phaidon coffee table books alluding to an Annie Liebovitz gift. The soirée came to a close with a final surprise: late-night bites from Raising Canes. 

    Victoria Justice’s Love Zombie Halloween 

    Victoria Justice Halloween 2025 partyCredit: Nick Velasco/Lasko Media
    Victoria Justice Halloween 2025 partyCredit: Nick Velasco/Lasko Media

    Celebrating her new single, “Love Zombie,” Victoria Justice got into the Halloween spirit early with a spooky-chic party at Bar Jubilee on Oct. 21. Dressed as a stylish, gory bride, the actress-singer was joined by Leon Thomas, Janet Jackson, sister Madison Grace and more who enjoyed bites, drinks and experiences courtesy of Rumor, Casablanca Karaoke, Altos Tequila, It’Sugarr, Dear Caviar, Peroni and Monbeau.  

    Gala of the Stars 

    Gala for the Stars 2025
    Janet Jackson
    Credit: Shutterstock
    Gala for the Stars 2025
    Noah Lands, Abby Lee Miller and Adrian Ruiz
    Credit: Shutterstock

    Dancers Against Cancer held its annual black-tie tribute to artistry, resilience and community within the global dance world. Hosted by Maks Chmerkovsky at The Beverly Hilton, the evening honored Janet Jackson, Liza Minnelli, Ben Vereen, Debbie Gibson, Derek Hough, JoJo Siwa, Anita Mann, Julie McDonald, Mandy Moore, Christopher Scott, Robbie Blue and Kaeli Ware and raised more than $700,00 to support dancers and families affected by cancer.  

    Staud Opens Melrose Avenue Flagship 

    STAUD Flagship Cocktail Event
    Lydia Kives, Sarah Staudinger, Veronica Smiley
    Credit: Jojo Korsh/ BFA
    STAUD Flagship Cocktail EventCredit: Jojo Korsh/ BFA
    STAUD Flagship Cocktail Event
    Lili Reinhart
    Credit: Jojo Korsh/ BFA

    On Oct. 23, Staud debuted its holiday collection with the unveiling of its new Melrose outpost. The in-store cocktail party paired bistro-style French fries and burgers with Champagne and cocktails by Tanqueray No. Ten, Ketel One Vodka and Casamigos Tequila, and wowed with a Staud x Roe Caviar ice installation. VIPs like Dixie D’Amelio, Charlotte Lawrence and Lili Reinhart mingled between snapping photos for live, custom portraits by Unfortunate Portrait.  

    Tory Burch Book Party 

    Cindy Crawford, Laura Dern, Laura Brown, Tory Burch, Kristina O’Neill and Carolyn Murphy
    Credit: Cody Marquez/BFA.com
    Kiernan Shipka
    Kiernan Shipka
    Credit: Cody Marquez/BFA.com

    Celebrating the release of Kristina O’Neill and Laura Brown’s new book, All the Cool Girls Get Fired: How to Let Go of Being Let Go and Come Back on Top, Cindy Crawford, Laura Dern, Max Greenfield, Kiernan Shipka and more hit the Tory Burch Rodeo Drive flagship on Oct. 23. Read more 

    Critics Choice Assoc. Celebration of Latino Cinema & Television 

    The Critics Choice Association's 5th Annual Celebration Of Latino Cinema & Television - Inside
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 24: America Ferrera accepts the Trailblazer award for “The Lost Bus” onstage during The Critics Choice Association’s 5th annual celebration of Latino Cinema & Television.
    Credit: JC Olivera/Getty Images for Critics Choice Association
    The Critics Choice Association's 5th Annual Celebration Of Latino Cinema & Television - Inside
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 24: (L-R) Cristo Fernández, Anthony Ramos, America Ferrera and Tonatiuh attend The Critics Choice Association’s 5th annual celebration of Latino Cinema & Television.
    Credit: Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images for Critics Choice Association
    The Critics Choice Association's 5th Annual Celebration Of Latino Cinema & Television - Inside
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 24: (2nd L-R) Dolores Huerta, winner of the Icon award and Gregory Nava attend The Critics Choice Association’s 5th annual celebration of Latino Cinema & Television.
    Credit: JC Olivera/Getty Images for Critics Choice Association

    Honoring the standout work of the Latino entertainment community on and off screen, the Critics Choice Assoc. threw an Oct. 24 celebration at the Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills with sponsors Milagro Tequila, NEP Sweetwater and Fiji Water. “It’s so great to be in these rooms with you, most especially with my hero Dolores Huerta, who has been a model for all of us about how to live a life of purpose,” Trailblazer Award winner America Ferrera said during her speech to a crowd that included fellow honorees Anthony Ramos, Gabriel Luna and Camila Perez. “Your dedication has brought dignity to the Latino community, and it has changed the story for millions of people about who we are and what we deserve.” Attendees also include Jamie Lee Curtis and Seth Rogen. 

    Willy Chavarria x Maxfield Party 

    Willy Chavarria
    Credit: Cody Marquez/BFA
    Credit: Cody Marquez/BFA
    Willy Chavarria x Maxfield Oct 2025 partyCredit: Matthew Kavanagh
    Willy Chavarria, Arianne Phillips, Jess Cuevas
    Credit: Cody Marquez/BFA

    Willy Chavarria unveiled his autumn-winter 2025 Tarantula collection and an exclusive capsule with a party at Maxfield in West Hollywood on Oct. 24, putting on a head-turning showcase of suits and streetwear among the boutique’s avant-garde curation of vintage and designer pieces. The California-born, New York-based fashion designer treated stylists Karla Welch, Enrique Melendez and B. Åkerlund and other guests to music by DJ Vago, a showcase of sleek lowriders, specialty cocktails made with Tequila Don Julio 70 Añejo Cristalino and gooey quesadillas from Leo’s Taco Truck. 

    The Rape Treatment Center and Stuart House Brunch 

    Rape Treatment Center and Stuart House Annual Brunch Hosted by Noah Wyle and the Cast of The Pitt
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 26: (L-R) Patrick Ball, Shawn Hatosy, Supriya Ganesh, Sepideh Moafi, Katherine LaNasa, Noah Wyle, Shabana Azeez, Taylor Dearden and Gerran Howell attend the Rape Treatment Center and Stuart House Annual Brunch hosted by Noah Wyle and the cast of “The Pitt” at Skirball Cultural Center on October 26, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
    Credit: Photo by Vivien Killilea/Getty Images for UCLA Rape Treatment Center
    Rape Treatment Center and Stuart House Annual Brunch Hosted by Noah Wyle and the Cast of The Pitt
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 26: Max Greenfield speaks during the Rape Treatment Center and Stuart House Annual Brunch.
    Credit: Photo by Vivien Killilea/Getty Images for UCLA Rape Treatment Center
    Rape Treatment Center and Stuart House Annual Brunch Hosted by Noah Wyle and the Cast of The Pitt
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 26: (L-R) Patrick Ball and Katherine LaNasa attend the Rape Treatment Center and Stuart House Annual Brunch.
    Credit: Photo by Vivien Killilea/Getty Images for UCLA Rape Treatment Center

    Hosted by Noah Wyle, Katherine LaNasa and their fellow cast members on The Pitt, The Rape Treatment Center and Stuart House at UCLA Health held its annual brunch at Skirball Cultural Center on Oct. 26. Other stars, advocates and community leaders joined the afternoon to honor survivors and raise funds during a live auction led by Max Greenfield.  

    Swarovski Celebrates Masters of Light: Hollywood Exhibition  

    SWAROVSKI Masters of Light Hollywood Opening Celebration
    Baz Luhrmann, Jeff Goldblum
    Credit: [Jason Sean Weiss/BFA.com
    Alexander Edwards, Cher
    Credit: Miguel McSongwe/BFA.com
    SWAROVSKI Masters of Light Hollywood Opening Celebration
    Rashmika Mandanna
    Credit: Jason Sean Weiss/BFA.com

    Swarovski officially landed in Hollywood with its Masters of Light exhibition by throwing a party on Oct. 28 at Amoeba Music, gathering Cher, Kylie Jenner, Baz Luhrmann, Viola Davis, Elisabeth Olsen, Alex Cosani and other friends of the house in the heart of Tinseltown. 

    2025 Dia de Muertos Gala

    Dia De Muertos Gala
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 30: Carlos Eric Lopez (R) and Miguel (L) attend the 2025 Dia De Muertos Gala presented by Lexus, Tequila Don Julio, Nike, DNERO, Calamigos Ranch and Maremoto at The Los Angeles River Center and Gardens.
    Credit: Photo by Gonzalo Marroquin/Getty Images for The Dia De Muertos Gala
    Dia De Muertos Gala
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 30: Lupita Infante performs onstage during the 2025 Dia De Muertos Gala presented by Lexus, Tequila Don Julio, Nike, DNERO, Calamigos Ranch and Maremoto at The Los Angeles River Center and Gardens on October 30, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images for The Dia De Muertos Gala)
    Credit: Photo by Gonzalo Marroquin/Getty Images for The Dia De Muertos Gala
    Dia De Muertos Gala
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 30: (L-R) Carlos Eric Lopez, Mercedes Rodriguez, and Camila Cabello attend the 2025 Dia De Muertos Gala presented by Lexus, Tequila Don Julio, Nike, DNERO, Calamigos Ranch and Maremoto at The Los Angeles River Center and Gardens on October 30, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images for The Dia De Muertos Gala)
    Credit: Photo by Gonzalo Marroquin/Getty Images for The Dia De Muertos Gala

    On Oct. 30, Camila Cabello presented the Abuelita Award to her grandmother, Mercedes Rodrigues, at the fifth annual Día de Muertos Gala hosted by Carlos Eric Lopez. Presented by Lexus, the party marked the launch of Lopez’s Tú Tomorrow nonprofit. Nicole Richie, Miguel, Taylor Zakhar Perez, Nezza, Xochitl Gomez and Gloria Calderon Kellett also attended.

    Simon Wiesenthal Center Humanitarian Dinner

    BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 30: Jeffrey Katzenberg speaks onstage during the humanitarian award dinner for Warner Bros. Discovery President and CEO David Zaslav presented by the Simon Wiesenthal Center at Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel on October 30, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California.
    Credit: on Kopaloff/Getty Images for Simon Wiesenthal Center
    BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 30: (L-R) Jim Berk, Dana Bash, Lee Kuperman, Steven Spielberg, Aya Meydan, Omer Shem Tov, Michael Feinstein, David Zaslav, Dawn Aaron and Daniel Finkelman attend the humanitarian award dinner for Warner Bros. Discovery President and CEO David Zaslav presented by the Simon Wiesenthal Center.
    Credit: on Kopaloff/Getty Images for Simon Wiesenthal Center

    The Simon Wiesenthal Center Humanitarian Dinner raised $4.3 million for its global education, advocacy and storytelling initiatives, drawing a crowd that included Steven Spielberg, Jon Bon Jovi and David Geffen. The ceremony honored Warner Bros. Discovery President and CEO David Zaslav; CNN Chief Political Correspondent Dana Bash; and October 7 survivors Aya Meydan and Omer Shem Tov.

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    Haley Bosselman

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  • Chanel’s Première Galon Watch Party Was an It Girl Summit

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    On Wednesday night in New York City, Tessa Thompson wore a black tank top and loose black slacks, a Chanel bow with long tails crowning her slick-back hairdo. She walked into Chateau Royale restaurant just before 7:30 p.m. for a dinner party hosted by Chanel to celebrate the launch of the French house’s Première Galon watch. Along with Riley Keough, Paloma Elsesser, Lucy Boynton, and Justine Skye, the intimate event ended up being a fabulous room full of It girls (usually the scenario when Chanel comes to town). Thompson, who arrived equipped with a Première Galon in 18 karat gold on her wrist, snapped some photos before heading upstairs for a meal of finely cooked Wagyu beef and escargot. “I love how delicate and feminine it is,” she told W later of the timepiece. “I love the idea of stacking it with bangles for every day.”

    There were plenty of air kisses exchanged in the dining room, where Devon Lee Carlson hobnobbed with Elsesser at their table and Keough sat across from Thompson nearby. Like many others, Thompson said she was locked in for designer Matthieu Blazy’s debut as the head of Chanel at Paris Fashion Week earlier this month. When it comes to his inaugural collection, she especially loved “all of the suiting.” The actress herself has been wearing looks lately that tap into a ladylike spin on suits, with structured jackets and skirts serving as hallmark silhouettes for the promotion tour of her new film, Hedda, directed by Nia DaCosta. What kind of watch does Thompson think her character, Hedda Gabler, would wear? “I think Hedda might actually love this watch and wear it,” she said of the Première Galon.

    Photo by Jamie McCarthy/WireImage

    One of the special features of this watch is its braided chain strap, a nod to the detail found on many of Chanel’s bag styles. Something of a Chanel party requirement is flexing your best handbag from the label, which a large amount of the attendees did on Wednesday night: 2.55s, Kisslock clutches, and Classic Flaps abounded. In fact, the only thing that rivaled the It girl summit was the impromptu It bag summit that came along with it.

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  • Austin’s Formula 1 Weekend Was a High-Octane Rodeo of Speed and Spectacle

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    Race winner Max Verstappen of the Netherlands and Oracle Red Bull Racing. Mark Sutton – Formula 1/Formula 1 via Getty Images

    Formula 1 is back in Austin, the “Home of Horsepower.” Instead of riding bucking broncos, the world’s fastest drivers are revving 1000 horsepower V6 engines around one of the year’s trickiest tracks.

    During race weekend (October 17-19) in Austin, the city is plastered with F1 imagery, from posters of Lando Norris’ face alongside 6th Street to the full range of Pirelli tires that adorn the lobby of the Thompson Hotel.  

    It’s the one weekend in Austin where lines around the block aren’t solely reserved for BBQ restaurants. Instead, Formula 1 fanatics queue for fans zones set up around the city like, the Atlassian Williams Racing Fan Zone where they can drive esports simulators, Lewis Hamilton’s Plus 44 store pop-up and former F1 driver Daniel Ricciardo’s Enchanté pop-up.

    Matthew McConaughey participates in the grid tour before the start of the United States Formula One Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas. AFP via Getty Images

    Digital luxury lifestyle concierge service Velocity Black is the official luxury lifestyle partner of the Aston Martin Aramco Formula 1 team, and members get access to some of the weekend’s most exclusive offerings, including the team’s hospitality suite in The Paddock Club, a hot lap, garage tours, pit lane walks and a lunch at the Aston Martin House, where drivers casually walk by as you munch on brisket croquettes and local tostadas.

    “Whether it be VIP hospitality, garage tours and hot lap access at F1 races, fine dining experiences or exclusive entertainment, we are committed to unlocking truly unforgettable moments across the globe,” says Sylvain Langrand, CEO of Velocity Black. 

    Malin Akerman and Brittany Snow attend the Uber One Rodeo. Getty Images for Uber

    Off the track, there was a private dinner at the iconic Franklin Barbecue with an intimate live performance by Grammy Award-winner Gary Clark Jr. And should members want to beat the Austin traffic, Velocity Black  arranges helicopter transports to and from the circuit.

    “F1 and Austin have acclimated to each other,” legendary BBQ pitmaster Aaron Franklin told Observer at a private dinner for Velocity Black members. “Now, people come here specifically for F1, and are more interested in the local scene and local culture. We had the McLaren team here last night, and they’re all just a bunch of really cool nerds. I love meeting people during race weekend that I wouldn’t normally have the chance to meet.”

    Roller coasters dot The Circuit Of The Americas (COTA) and it seems like the mandatory dress code is cowboy hats and boots. When cars aren’t rounding the circuit, musical performances throughout the weekend include Kygo and Garth Brooks, Turnpike Troubadours, as well as local Austin talent.

    This year, Austin was a sprint weekend, meaning there was an extra mini-race with more points on the line for the championship battle. Track temperatures weren’t the only scorching hot thing on Saturday, as the sprint race was off to a spicy start. The crowd gasped as both McLarens made contact, forcing them out of the sprint race and any chance at points. Overall, a bad day for Oscar Piastri, currently leading the driver’s championship, as he only placed P6 in qualifying, while his teammate and championship rival, Lando Norris, came in at P2.

    Glen Powell on the grid during the F1 Grand Prix of United States at Circuit of The Americas. Formula 1 via Getty Images

    And on race day, COTA was hot as H-E double toothpicks, but celebrities still lined the track, including Matthew McConaughey, Glen Powell, Malin Akerman and Adele. Max Verstappen dominated, winning the race with Lando Norris coming in second and Charles LeClerc third. There were plenty of overtakes and on-track action, but no red flags. Although the race wasn’t as exciting as the sprint, it was consequential for the driver’s championship, with Lando narrowing the gap to Oscar Piastri by 14 points.

    And as the sun set on Austin, the city was electric with bars packed with F1 fans, and private events and parties, like the Esses Magazine one-year anniversary party with two special guests, as the Visa Cash App RB drivers Isack Hadjar and Liam Lawson made an appearance. At the One Party by Uber, a musical performance by the Zac Brown Band opened with a traditional Texas rodeo.

    While partaking in a BBQ dinner, another Texas tradition, Jak Crawford, an F2 driver and Texas native told Observer, “My favorite thing about race weekend in Austin is the food. The brisket, it’s so good here.” While he hasn’t raced here yet he says, “I can’t wait to drive here, it can be a really tricky circuit.”

    Austin’s Formula 1 Weekend Was a High-Octane Rodeo of Speed and Spectacle

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    Katie Lockhart

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  • What Should Charli xcx Do After Brat? “Whatever the F— She Wants”

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    Playwright and producer Jeremy O. Harris shared a similar sentiment. “I want to see Charli do whatever she wants to do. I think that’s when we get the best results,” he said. “I think when people pre-describe what Charli should do, it’s to their detriment. The best compass for where Charli should go next is Charli.” Harris stars with Charli in one of her seven upcoming films: Erupcja, directed by Pete Ohs, which received overwhelmingly positive reviews after premiering at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival. “It’s such a shock that an artist like Charli would take it upon herself to not just go to Poland, but also to strip down, become a very different person, and work in a way that had no frills,” said Harris.

    “I think that when the time comes, she should do something that just comes to her and just enters her ear. Like, whatever feels best at that point,” said rapper Jack Harlow. The “Whats Poppin” artist revealed that he and Charli have connected on the film reviewing app Letterboxd. His handle? MissionaryJack. (We’ll let you guess why.) Another Jack echoed his words about Charli’s future: “I feel like I can’t decide that. For me, that’s up to her,” said Adults star Jack Innanen. (Is his FX sitcom returning, by the way? Innanen is not at liberty to say, though he did express some optimism: “Fingers crossed.”)

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    Chris Murphy

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  • Victoria Beckham Is Done Proving Herself: “I’ve Earned My Right to Show in Paris”

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    Andy Cohen, Victoria Beckham, and John Arthur HillHippolyte Petit

    They weren’t the only Beckhams in attendance. Victoria’s longtime husband, David Beckham—perhaps the most famous footballer of all time as well as the co-owner of soccer clubs in both the US and the UK—was also there to support his wife, carrying what looked like three large canvas bags filled with gifts she’d received from other attendees and sitting front row at the event. While he was clearly chuffed to celebrate the mother of their four children—Brooklyn, 26; Romeo, 23; Cruz, 20; and Harper, 14; none of whom were in attendance—he kept his thoughts about the evening close to his chest: When asked about the doc, he replied, “Ask my wife—you’re better off with her.”

    Victoria had plenty to say when the main event began. After opening remarks from Wintour, who appears in the docuseries looking, as she joked, like Beckham’s “mad old aunt,” Beckham spoke with Guiducci about her rough post–Spice Girls era, her reinvention as a fashion designer, and most candidly, her yearslong struggle with an eating disorder.

    “When I was a youngster, and your body’s changing and you’re going through puberty, it’s a really difficult time,” Beckham told Guiducci. “I was bullied a lot mentally and physically when I was at school.” While attending theater college before joining the Spice Girls, “I was constantly told by the staff at the dancing school that I was fat,” says Beckham. “I was at an age—it is an impressionable age, and it’s confusing and it’s hurtful.” When she joined one of the most successful girl groups of all time and married the most famous footballer in the world, she found herself living under a microscope. “I’ve never complained, and I’m not complaining about it. It is a very different time now,” Beckham said. “You couldn’t get away with weighing someone on television six months after they’ve had a baby, literally.”

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    Chris Murphy

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