logo
Simone Ashley beams with Stanley Tucci and Meryl Streep as they arrive on set of Devil Wears Prada 2 before filming in NYC

Simone Ashley beams with Stanley Tucci and Meryl Streep as they arrive on set of Devil Wears Prada 2 before filming in NYC

Daily Mail​a day ago
Simone Ashley looked happier than ever as she joined Stanley Tucci and Meryl Streep on set of Devil Wears Prada 2 for filming in NYC.
The actress, 30, best known for stealing hearts as Kate Sharma in Netflix 's Bridgerton, has officially joined the cast of the much-anticipated sequel, though details about her character are still tightly under wraps.
On Friday, Simone was spotted running lines alongside her legendary co-stars at the Museum of Natural History.
The trio were seen sharing laughs as they explored the set, offering fans an exciting glimpse into what's shaping up to be a star-studded movie.
Simone embraced casual city chic in a bold red crop top emblazoned with the phrase 'Stressed but well dressed'.
She paired it with black jorts and chunky white trainers.
Meryl, returning as the formidable Miranda Priestly, looked every bit the fashion icon in a beige trench layered over a black-and-white checkered blouse.
While Stanley, reprising his role as the ever-stylish Nigel, kept things sharp in a tailored navy suit and white polo shirt.
As the night approached, the cast switched into their evening attire for filming what appeared to be a glamorous gala scene.
Simone turned heads in a show-stopping black gown with dramatic detailing that hinted her character may have serious fashion credentials of her own.
Meryl brought full-on drama in a sweeping red gown, while Stanley looked effortlessly dapper in a classic black tux.
David Frankel - who directed the first 2006 movie - is returning as director on the sequel as well.
Aside from Anne Hathaway and Meryl, other stars that are reprising their roles in the second movie include Emily Blunt and Stanley.
Simone Lucy Liu, Pauline Chalamet, Kenneth Branagh, Tracie Thomas, B.J. Novak and Justin Theroux are other cast members in the project.
Meryl brought full-on drama in a sweeping red gown, while Stanley looked effortlessly dapper in a classic black tux
At one stage Meryl was seen taking a tumble on the steps
The premise: 'Follows Miranda Priestly's struggle against Emily Charlton, her former assistant turned rival executive, as they compete for advertising revenue amidst declining print media while Miranda nears retirement,' per IMDB.
By the time the sequel hits theaters next year in May 2026, it would be 20 years after the first movie was released.
The Devil Wears Prada was a critical success and raked in $326.7 million in the box office on a budget of around $35-$41 million.
It also garnered two Oscar nominations, such as Best Actress for Meryl Streep. Other nods included five BAFTAs and three Golden Globes - with Streep winning for Best Actress in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy.
During an interview with WWD, Anne - who is also set to star in The Princess Diaries 3 - opened up about reprising previous roles.
'I was so beautifully cared for on both of those films,' she recalled, while adding that she had been young when making both The Devil Wears Prada and The Princess Diaries.
'I was so guided and looked after and cared for by the communities that made both of those films in particular, each of their directors, Garry Marshall and David Frankel.'
She added: 'I'm so excited that now I can do that for other people, that now I have the knowledge and the experience and the confidence to take care of other people on sets in which I'm looked at as a leader.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nashville hands over land beneath city to Elon Musk
Nashville hands over land beneath city to Elon Musk

Daily Mail​

time6 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Nashville hands over land beneath city to Elon Musk

Nashville is getting a serious makeover thanks to Tesla billionaire Elon Musk. Musk's The Boring Company has plans to build a futuristic underground tunnel in Tennessee that will transport passengers from the city center to the airport in just eight minutes using electric vehicles. But while the project has support from the state's federal lawmakers, local leaders aren't so sure. One representative called it a 'vanity project for the wealthy' and it has been dubbed the 'Music City Loop'. The tunnel will run 10 miles from the city center to the airport on Nashville's south-east corridor, with its entrance just steps from the airport. The privately funded project will supposedly shuttle Tennesseans between downtown and the airport in only eight minutes. That's a big saving in time from downtown to the airport, which takes about 30 minutes by taxi, rideshare, or bus. The company plans to use electric vehicles to connect city hotspots, similar to an already operating Boring system in Las Vegas. Musk and The Boring Company seemed to have the full support of Republican lawmakers at a press conference announcing the project on July 28. Republican Tennessee Governor Bill Lee said he was excited by the tunnel. 'They could have taken their next underground loop anywhere, but they saw something unique about Tennessee,' he said. 'The best part of all of it is it's 100 percent privately funded. There will be no cost to Tennessee taxpayers.' John Ray Clemens, chair of the Tennessee House Democratic Caucus, hammered the privately funded project as 'fiscally irresponsible and legally suspect'. 'No responsible executive would give away unrestricted and unlimited underground property rights to an unhinged billionaire, who Donald Trump doesn't even trust anymore, and grant him and his company exclusive access rights beneath our city and a monopoly to profit in perpetuity.' The project has yet to receive approval from the Metro Nashville Council or the mayor's office, and Nashville Mayor Freddie O'Connell was notably absent from the event. In a brief statement about the project, he said: 'We are aware of the state's conversations with The Boring Company, and we have a number of operational questions to understand the potential impacts on Metro and Nashvillians.' Yet, United States Senator Marsha Blackburn seemed to think the impact would be overwhelmingly positive. She posted on X that the company 'couldn't have picked a better new home for their state-of-the-art tunneling technology than Nashville'. She wrote: 'I look forward to seeing the tremendous impact of this investment in our city!' State Representative Aftyn Behn called the tunnel a 'privatization of public infrastructure,' noting that it was designed to benefit a select few 'not the people who actually live and work here'. In his press release about the 'Music City Loop' Behn wrote, 'It's a vanity project for the wealthy, and once again, the Lee administration is rolling out the red carpet for billionaires while working families are stuck in traffic.' 'We rank at the bottom in livability, and yet instead of investing in roads, schools, and transit that benefit everyday Tennesseans, they're floating billion-dollar boondoggles for the ultra-rich,' stated state Senator Heidi Campbell. The decision seems to be just as divisive among citizens as it is among local lawmakers. One local posted on Reddit afterwards: 'And the grift continues. This isn't a much-needed or desirable project. This is a grift meant to line the pockets of the world's richest person. The goal was never providing a decent or even acceptable transit service.' Another commented: 'Could've had a great light rail system and instead get this utter nonsense.' A third wrote: 'What a complete waste of money that could be going to build transit that's actually useful.' Regardless of the public's opinion, The Boring Company is ready to go full speed ahead. Construction will begin immediately following the approval process, according to the Tennessee state government. It could be operational as early as Fall 2026.

Caitlin Clark caught whispering with Sophie Cunningham about WNBA rival who 'hates' her in viral clip
Caitlin Clark caught whispering with Sophie Cunningham about WNBA rival who 'hates' her in viral clip

Daily Mail​

time6 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Caitlin Clark caught whispering with Sophie Cunningham about WNBA rival who 'hates' her in viral clip

Caitlin Clark appeared to gossip with Sophie Cunningham about a WNBA rival who 'hates' her during the Indiana Fever's win over the Dallas Wings on Friday night. Footage captured by ION shows Cunningham whispering into the ear of Clark, who has been out for the last three weeks with a groin injury, while sitting on the bench together in Dallas. It is unclear what the Fever guard initially said given to her superstar teammate she was covering her mouth with a towel. However, Clark seemingly responds to Cunningham by saying: 'Yep, I know... she hates me.' Fans quickly began to speculate about who the Indiana sensation could have been talking about if those comments were lip read accurately. One Dallas player she has feuded with in the past is DiJonai Carrington, who infamously poked her in the eye during the 2024 WNBA playoffs. 'Yup, I know. She hates me' Caitlin Clark after Sophie Cunningham whispered in her ear 😭 — BricksCenter (@BricksCenter) August 2, 2025 Clark was left with a black eye after the poke, which came while Carrington was playing for the Connecticut Sun. No foul was called despite the contact knocking her to the ground, before the Sun went on to claim victory in Game 1. In her postgame press conference, Clark was sporting a clear shiner on her right eye after the finger to the face. 'Obviously, she got me pretty good in the eye,' she told reporters about the poke. One month after the incident, Carrington mocked Clark by recreating the poke during an Instagram live stream with girlfriend and fellow WNBA player NaLyssa Smith. Smith looked to deliberately catch her eye before she said, 'You poked me in the eye' with a smile on her face. The pair then began laughing as Carrington asked, 'Did you do it on purpose?' - an apparent dig at USA TODAY columnist Christine Brennan for suggesting she poked Clark intentionally. Cunningham, who has become Clark's enforcer on the court since joining the Fever this year, recently leapt to her teammate's defense after claiming she is unfairly targeted by her WNBA rivals. 'You have seen players in our league try and toughen up Caitlin. Even when I wasn't on her team. I know the talks that Phoenix had in the locker room,' Sophie said on her new Show Me Something podcast. ''No, we're going to show her what the W really is'. I get it to a certain extent. Every rookie coming into the league, that's how you're going to treat them. 'But there's just more for her. Now, being on her team, I'm like: 'What are people doing?! It's just too much'.

The ambitious sisters from 'new money' who rocked 1990s NYC high society... and bagged themselves royal husbands
The ambitious sisters from 'new money' who rocked 1990s NYC high society... and bagged themselves royal husbands

Daily Mail​

time6 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

The ambitious sisters from 'new money' who rocked 1990s NYC high society... and bagged themselves royal husbands

It's no secret that there is a societal fascination with sisters. From the socialite Schuyler sisters in the 1700s, to the reality TV star Kardashians today. There's athletes Serena and Venus Williams, and models Gigi and Bella Hadid. In the 1990s, New York City was enamored with a trio of sisters who dominated the city's social scene, and eventually dazzled their way down the aisle with three of the world's most eligible bachelors. They were known as the Miller Sisters, and their pictures were plastered all over magazines – shots of them sitting front row at runway shows or photographs of them sipping champagne on luxury vacations. The trio are the daughters of Robert Warren Miller, an American–born British businessman who co–founded DFS Group, known colloquially as Duty Free. He married Ecuadorian–born María Clara 'Chantal' Pesantes Becerra, and together, they had the three stunningly beautiful girls. According to Kristen Richardson – high–society expert and author of The Season: A Social History of the Debutante, the 1990s were a very interesting time to observe high society. 'It [the 1990s] had a feeling of transition, because you had the traditional upper class, recognizable on both sides of the Atlantic, which was disintegrating, and you had the rise of new types of money – entertainment money, the beginning of tech money... and the scale of money became much bigger,' Richardson explained. 'What happened to the old money in the 90s was, not only did their fortunes become less significant, but the cultural value shifted and made them less relevant,' she continued. Speaking about the Miller sisters, Richardson noted that they were not old money, as their father was a duty–free billionaire. They were new money, and they had no problem flaunting their wealth – although they did so with taste and elegance. Richardson chalked the public fascination with them being mostly due to the fact that they were sisters with a massive amount of money, as well as their good manners and taste, which was more rare during that time. 'They were ambitious,' she said. And their ambitions certainly paid off. Pia Christina Miller, now 58, is the eldest of the sisters. She was born in New York City, spent her childhood in Hong Kong and later attended Institut Le Rosey – a private boarding school in Switzerland. She briefly attended Barnard College in New York and later studied art history at Georgetown University. The eldest sister married Getty Oil heir, Christopher Getty, in 1992 in a lavish 300–guest Bali wedding. They said their vows on a mountaintop, while Indonesian children dropped rose petals on them. Pia's wedding, shockingly, was much more intimate and low–key than the weddings of her younger sisters. The middle sister Marie–Chantal, now 56, was born in London, and attended school in Hong Kong, Switzerland, Paris and New York. She began a degree in History of Art at NYU – having interned with Andy Warhol while still in high school – but her higher education efforts were cut short, naturally, when she was proposed to by the prince of Greece. Marie–Chantal met Pavlos of Greece (an exiled crown prince and of son of Greece's last king, King Constantine II) when one of her friends – New York investment banker Alecko Papamarkou – set them up on a blind date. 'We clicked,' the Princess told Vanity Fair in 2008. 'It was love at first sight. I knew that he was the person I would marry.' Pavlos – who is also of Danish royal blood through his mother, Queen Anne–Marie – proposed to Marie–Chantal on a skiing holiday in Gstaad, Switzerland, at Christmas. The pair's London wedding was the event of the social season, the New York Times reported that the occasion sent a global message, 'the display of class, social clout and uptown style are back in fashion'. Valentino scored the ultimate job of designing not only the bridal gown, but 61 other outfits – including dresses for Queen Sofia of Spain, the Infanta Cristina, Princess Rosario and Empress Farah Diba. 'I have never been to such a beautifully arranged wedding – the flowers, the tables, the tent,' Valentino said of the extravagant 1,200–person event. Nuptials took place at a mansion in the English countryside – where giant marquees recreated the Parthenon and 100,000 flowers were flown in from Ecuador. The youngest Miller sister also married into royal blood. Alexandra, now 52, was born in Hong Kong, and eventually attended Parsons School of Design and Brown University, where she studied costume design and art history. Despite being the youngest, Alexandra made her romantic catch before her older sisters. In 1987, 14–year–old Alexandra was walking home to The Carlyle Hotel on the Upper East Side when she encountered the dashing 17–year–old Prince Alexander von Fürstenberg in the elevator. Alexander is the son of the Austro–Italian aristocrat and Fiat heir, Prince Egon von Fürstenberg and fashion designer, Diane von Fürstenberg. They didn't officially start dating until Alexandra was 18. The pair got married in a glorious ceremony at St. Ignatius Loyola Church on New York's Park Avenue in front of 650 guests. Alexandra stunned in an off–the–shoulder white satin with a bouffant skirt and a long white tulle veil falling – the work of Karl Lagerfeld for Chanel. However, of the three marriages, only one survived. Marie–Chantal and Pavlos are still married with five children – four boys and one girl. Alexandra and Alexander Von Fürstenberg had two children together – a girl and a boy. Pia and Christopher Getty had four children – one girl and three boys – together, but their marriage also ended 13 years after saying 'I do'. While, in comparison to today's socialite–types, the Miller sisters appear to reflect the notion of quiet luxury, Richardson holds that in their heyday they were not understated. 'They were in every magazine, all day, every day, for years... at every party,' she explained. She continued, 'I think we see them now and compare them to like the Kardashians and they seem understated, but my definition of understated is invisible... and they were not invisible.' Luckily, we don't have to imagine what the Miller sisters' social media accounts might look like had they been young in today's generation, because each sister had a daughter of their own – and they're now best friends. If you look at Isabel Getty, 31, Princess Marie–Olympia of Greece, 29, or Talita Von Fürstenberg, 26, on Instagram then you will see a highlight reel of Mediterranean getaways, British music festivals, grandiose family Christmas celebrations and endless events. Talita is an annual attendee of the Met Gala and Isabel a regular at Royal Ascot. But despite the Miller sisters' former wild ways, they appear to be stricter with their own heiresses. 'Olympia says I was the strictest with her – the poor thing,' Marie–Chantal told Avenue in 2021. 'When she would go on sleepovers, I would say, "Prove it to me that you're at your friend's house" and she'd have to take a picture. 'When I was her age, I was in New York with Andy Warhol. She reminds me all the time. She'd say, "It's ironic that you're so strict with me when you were out and about, completely able to do whatever you wanted."' 'I guess that's the way it is — you learn from your experiences. I had a lot more independence young, and therefore I am stricter and more worried because the world is a different place,' she said. While these women's Wikipedia pages may describe them as 'socialites', Richardson isn't sure such a thing exists anymore. 'I don't even know if there are female socialites now,' she said. ' I think the expectation, historically, was that a female socialite would be very charitable... would essentially draw attention to causes. 'The party needed to have some degree of virtue at some level to justify its existence,' she continued. Now, with social media, socialite–types don't need to be out supporting causes to make themselves look good, because they can do damage control and sculpt their image from the comfort of their private luxury yacht.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store