The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

The 5 dollar dress worn by Sarah Jessica Parker in "And Just Like That" divides fans of the series

2021-12-24T12:31:59.737Z


Broadcast since December 9, the sequel to "Sex and the city" deploys an ever wider range of fashion. Among the flagship looks, a dress worn by Sarah Jessica Parker, which reportedly cost one of the costume designers just $ 5, drew reactions.


Carrie Bradshaw is back.

On December 9, the first episodes of the sequel to

Sex And The City

,

And Just Like That,

were unveiled.

The opportunity to find the New Yorker and her XXL wardrobe.

Even if his style has not always been received with the same enthusiasm.

In video, "And Just Like That", the trailer

Indeed, Internet fashion detectives have associated one of the dresses worn by her interpreter, Sarah Jessica Parker, with a piece on sale at Forever 21. The piece in question: a long cream-colored patterned dress, slit on the side. Disappointed to see that she swapped designer clothes for fast fashion, fans of the series expressed their dissatisfaction on social networks.

But costume designers Molly Rogers and Danny Santiago quickly set the record straight.

The dress is actually a personal piece of the costume designer, which he bought used a few years ago for as little as $ 5.

"We later learned that Forever 21 had a very similar dress," Molly Rogers told

Page Six

.

The garment would also be the creation of an Indian designer.

Sarah Jessica Parker on the set of

And Just Like That

in a secondhand $ 5 long dress.

Getty Images

The New York premiere of "And Just Like That"

The New York premiere of "And Just Like That"

Sarah Jessica Paker arrives at the

And Just Like That

premiere

at the Museum of Modern Art.

(New York, December 8.)

Getty Images

The New York premiere of "And Just Like That"

For this occasion, the actress was accompanied by her son James and her husband, Matthew Broderick.

(New York, December 8.)

Getty Images

The New York premiere of "And Just Like That"

Cynthia Nixon aka Miranda was also present for the New York premiere of the series

.

(New York, December 8.)

Getty Images

The New York premiere of "And Just Like That"

What would

And Just Like That

be without Charlotte, played by Kristin Davis.

(New York, December 8.)

Getty Images

The New York premiere of "And Just Like That"

The New York premiere of "And Just Like That"

The New York premiere of "And Just Like That"

The New York premiere of "And Just Like That"

The New York premiere of "And Just Like That"

The New York premiere of "And Just Like That"

The New York premiere of "And Just Like That"

The New York premiere of "And Just Like That"

The New York premiere of "And Just Like That"

See the slideshow

13 photos

An outfit that divides

While fans were also divided over whether to accompany the dress with a button-down blue shirt, Molly Rogers felt it was a perfect match for the scene in which Carrie confronts Natasha (Bridget Moynahan), the Mr Big's ex-wife, perched on glittery blue heeled sandals. “Michael Patrick King, the show's director, wanted her to wear something that wasn't typical 'Carrie',” she explains. "It was Sarah Jessica Parker's idea to include this blue shirt." Namely that the American actress has always been cooperative and involved in the wardrobe of her character. Of which she even wears, in this new series, some pieces seen in

Sex and the City

,kept all this time in its own dressing room.

The editorial team advises you

  • Sarah Jessica Parker offers a family red carpet in New York, with her husband and her 19-year-old son James

  • 'Sex & The City' Actresses Bulk Support Chris Noth's Alleged Victims

  • Age, sex ... and fun: the operation to win back the trio of "Sex and the City"

Source: lefigaro

All life articles on 2021-12-24

You may like

News/Politics 2024-02-07T04:22:41.552Z

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.