logo
Law & Order star Mariska Hargitay, 61, shoots husband of 20 years a loving look during rare date night in Cannes

Law & Order star Mariska Hargitay, 61, shoots husband of 20 years a loving look during rare date night in Cannes

Daily Mail​23-05-2025

Mariska Hargitay seemed to be inspired by old Hollywood glamor as she attended the annual Foundation for AIDS Research gala in Cannes Thursday night.
The actress, 61, who has been at the film festival promoting her documentary My Mom Jayne, about her later mother, blonde bombshell Jayne Mansfield.
The Law & Order: SVU star stepped out in a stunning white gown with a silver beaded halter neck and a short train from the French fashion house Patou.
In keeping with her classic look, the Emmy winner had her thick, chestnut tresses styled in a sleek updo. She chose to let her natural beauty shine out wearing a sensuous smoky eye with a hint of blush and a soft pink lip.
Hargitay accessorized with diamond earrings, rings, a bracelet and a purse from gala sponsor Chopard.
Sharing the look on social media she thanked her makeup artist Georgi Sandev and hair stylist David von Cannon for their help in making her picture perfect for the fundraiser.
Peter Hermann, 57, looked elegant in a black tuxedo and shirt, which highlighted his salt and pepper hair and beard.
The couple, who have been married for more than 20 years and share three kids together, seemed like newlyweds, holding hands as they made their way toward the storied Hotel du Cap-Eden-Roc.
Sharing a photo of herself and Hermann on social media, Hargitay played off the couple's bridal look tagging the photo with #isaidyes, which many future brides use to announce their engagements.
The pair met when Hermann was a guest star on SVU in 2002.
Their son August, was born in 2006, and they adopted daughter Amaya and son Andrew, both 13, in 2011.
All three kids accompanied their parents to Cannes, but Thursday night was a rare public date night for their mom and dad.
Giving a shoutout to charitable organization, Hargitay wrote, 'Thank you @amfarfor the extraordinary work you do in the fight to end the global aids epidemic.'
Since it's founding in 1985, 'amfAR has raised more than $920 million in support of its programs and has awarded more than 3,800 grants to research teams worldwide,' according to the organization's website.
Hargitay directed and produced the documentary My Mom Jayne.
The love letter to her late mother, who died in an automobile accident in 1967, received a four minute standing ovation after it was screened May 17.
Deadline's Pete Hammond wrote in his review the film 'includes a very happy ending that just might have you in tears. It is indeed quite a ride, quite a life and quite an extraordinary film.'
My Mom Jayne will begin streaming on Max June 27.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Always in my heart': Luis Enrique pays tribute to late daughter after PSG triumph
‘Always in my heart': Luis Enrique pays tribute to late daughter after PSG triumph

The Guardian

time42 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

‘Always in my heart': Luis Enrique pays tribute to late daughter after PSG triumph

As Paris Saint-Germain clinched their first Champions League title, Luis Enrique's thoughts turned to his late daughter. Six years ago Xana died of osteosarcoma, a rare form of bone cancer. She was nine. And at the moment when he scaled the peak of his coaching career, Luis Enrique paid tribute to the child who he said was 'always in my heart'. At full-time the Paris fans unveiled a tifo depicting Luis and Xana, recreating the moment when he planted a flag in the pitch alongside her after winning the Champions League with Barcelona in 2015. 'It was very emotional with the banner from the fans for my family,' Luis Enrique said. 'But I always think about my daughter.' As for his history-making side, Luis Enrique could reflect on a mission spectacularly accomplished, after a 5-0 win over Inter that PSG dominated from start to finish. 'Since day one, I said I wanted to win important trophies,' he said. 'Paris had never won the Champions League. We did it for the first time. It's a great feeling to make many people happy.' Paris scored two goals inside 20 minutes and completed the rout in the second half, with the winger Désiré Doué scoring twice. 'We had a great start to the game, dominating from the beginning,' said Luis Enrique. 'But I wanted them to keep pushing, scoring, to ensure we won the game.' Doué, 19, was still processing a game that has elevated him into the very elite of world football. 'I can't believe what happened tonight,' he said. 'We made history for the club, in French football, in European football. We're a great team, and we showed it.' Inter's manager, Simone Inzaghi, tried to put a brave face on his side's humiliation. 'This hurts,' he said. 'Of course the game wasn't good enough on our part.' But he also insisted: 'We can come out stronger from this defeat, like we did in 2023 [after losing the final to Manchester City] and then won the league the following season.'

Désiré Doué joins the global A-list to lead PSG's coronation as kings of Europe
Désiré Doué joins the global A-list to lead PSG's coronation as kings of Europe

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Désiré Doué joins the global A-list to lead PSG's coronation as kings of Europe

The third great Moment of Doué was beautiful for its simplicity, 63 minutes into this game and with Paris Saint-German 2-0 up. As Désiré Doué glided in on goal, all alone suddenly in a wide open patch of green, he was found by a deliciously weighted through pass from Vitinha. From there Doué allowed the ball to run across him as the retreating Inter defenders closed at his back, a perfect little screenshot of time, space, angles, ground speed allowing him to open his right instep and shoot with the path of the pass, wrong-footing Yann Sommer and easing the ball into the far corner. The celebration, and indeed the game itself to that point, felt coronational. Doué took off his shirt, saw it placed it on the corner flag and stood in clean-cut gladiatorial pose in front of the Paris supporters, before slightly sheepishly – this is also very Doué-like – going to retrieve his shirt and accept his yellow card. By then the game was gone, as was Doué shortly after, replaced by Bradley Barcola. And really it was his opening 20 minutes that decided this Champions League final. Doué is a very distinct kind of attacking tyro, with a martial artist's precision in his close-quarter fast-twitch movements, always just enough of a feint and a snap of the heels, always purposeful, never gratuitous. Watching him on nights like these it is as though somebody has taken Neymar and boiled him for eight hours until all the waffle and frippery has disappeared, then sent him on to the pitch crisp and starched and purified. This is a Neymar without the madness, the weight, the excess appetite, a post-therapy Neymar. Plus of course Doué has that thing all the best players have, the compound eye vision, the ability to freeze, rewind, judge the space and angles around him in the tiniest flicker of everyone else's analogue time. How do you get like this, aged 19, on this stage, a goal and an assist in the opening 20 minutes of the Champions League final, for a team that have never won it, and who you joined only last summer? Doué has been a late-breaking story this season after his move from Rennes. He didn't score his first goal at the Parc des Princes until March. He hadn't scored or assisted in eight games coming into this final. But he is without question the high-ceilinged real deal. Lamine Yamal may be more obviously, cinematically effective. But Doué is at the same level, just more compact and less lavish, the further maths version to Yamal's bold strokes of fine art. By the end here, as another 19-year-old, Senny Mayulu, made it 5-0 against a frazzled Inter, this had become the perfect night for PSG and for the Paris Project, overseen by the unclosing hand of Qatar Sports Investments. First we take the world. Then we take Europe, via Paris, Doha and now Munich. For the state of Qatar and its interests this is football pretty much completed. In the space of three years the world's most relentlessly efficient gas state's outreach arm has won a home World Cup, led by its star player, the Emir's tailor's dummy Lionel Messi, and now the greatest club prize. PSG are currently the best team in the world, treble winners and champions of Europe, the scalps of three recent finalists dangling from their belts on that run. And really this was just too easy most of the time, a flaneuring kind of victory against opponents who were always either chasing, panting for breath or windmilling away just out of reach. Munich had spent Saturday baking in the sun, a city already on its summer holidays, green fringes thronged with picnickers, sunbathers and knots of Italian men sweating across the white heat of the Englische Garten in blue and black nylon shirts. The Allianz Arena is an epic, widescreen kind of stage, those steeply tiered stands curving towards a perfectly puckered oval of powder blue above the lip of the roof. Ten minutes before kick-off it was still hot and heavy, the kind of evening that makes you sweat just sitting still. Linkin Park, who must have a very good agent, put on an agreeably energetic pre-match rap-metal stomp-about. A celebrity violinist performed a hideous screeching Seven Nation Army fiddle-along. The giant Parisian tifo was scrolled away. And from the start this was just pain for Inter, a time to run and harry and chase younger and fresher opponents as the Mendes-Vitinha midfield pivot, PSG's velcro-touch directors of traffic just took the ball away. Physical and mental intensity was always going to be key. PSG have been able to replenish the stocks, let the bruises heal, rest their best players. Inter have been all-in, flailing through a series of crunch end-of-season dates, limbs sloshing with lactic acid all the way to the line. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion It showed. For 12 minutes this was a kind of smothering. After that it became an extended execution, led by Doué. The first goal came from a lovely piece of applied geometry, all clean crisp lines, made first by Khvicha Kvaratskhelia easing inside two defenders. From there the blue shirts completed a high-speed passing triangle, the key ball from Vitinha pinged hard into the feet of Doué, who had found space by not moving, holding his position while Inter's defenders went to cover. He clipped the ball back for Achraf Hakimi to side-foot into an empty net. The second goal eight minutes later was a break the full length of the pitch, PSG funnelling out from their own corner flag, finding Ousmane Dembélé in space, there to gallop away, all easy grace, head up, before curling a crossfield pass into the run of Doué. He controlled with his torso, then hit down on the ball at the top of its bounce, a deflection taking it past Sommer. Either side PSG were immaculate. This was box-fresh elite club football, possession, counter-press, swift transitions. At times it's like watching a team of head prefects, a supremely drilled exhibition the Iberian-Catalan Style, with just the right bolt-on parts in every role. This is of course the work of Luis Enrique, who has won 11 out of 11 finals, and who was up from the start at the edge of his rectangle, all in black with white trainers, lithe and animated, revolving both arms, shuttle running left to right, like a mime artist taking part in a gruelling military fitness drill. It has been said Luis Enrique turned to Paris two years ago after being appalled by the despotic owners of Chelsea and Spurs, which is certainly an interesting take on the extraordinary freedoms inherent in the Qatari propaganda project. But he has been the perfect man at the perfect time, the ideologue, the data-based strongman, here just as the years of celebrity overdose are finally cashed in, brand leveraged, income vast enough to leave PSG with a free hand to build a brilliant, hungry, youthful modern team. The idea has been to create a group of anti-stars. Good luck with that. Doué will now take his place, up there floating in his tin can high above the world, the latest addition to the global A-list. From Paris via Doha, with Catalan style, Asturian brains, past the scars of all those glitzy late stage slumps, PSG now stand at the summit.

Luis Enrique in emotional tribute to daughter Xana, who died from cancer aged nine, after winning Champions League
Luis Enrique in emotional tribute to daughter Xana, who died from cancer aged nine, after winning Champions League

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Luis Enrique in emotional tribute to daughter Xana, who died from cancer aged nine, after winning Champions League

LUIS ENRIQUE paid an emotional tribute to his late daughter Xana after winning the Champions League. Enrique led Paris Saint-Germain to the holy grail of European football for the first time ever with a record-breaking 5-0 win over Inter Milan. 7 7 7 Desire Doue led the way with two goals and an assist. Achraf Hakimi, Khvicha Kvaratskhelia and Senny Mayulu were also on target as PSG inflicted the biggest-ever European Cup final defeat on helpless Inter. At the final whistle, Enrique celebrated by hugging wife Elena, son Pacho, 26, and daughter Sira, 25. The result marked the Spanish boss' second Champions League win after leading Barcelona to glory 10 years ago. But Enrique also used the moment to pay tribute to youngest daughter Xana, who tragically died in 2019 at the age of nine from bone cancer. Following 2015's UCL win, Xana famously waved a Barcelona flag as proud dad Enrique watched on. A decade later, the gaffer remembered his daughter as he switched into a black t-shirt bearing her name. The top also showed a picture of two cartoon characters, one little and one large, each clutching a flag bearing PSG's club crest. Meanwhile in the stands, French fans also paid tribute with a tifo showing Enrique planting a PSG flag into the ground with Xana watching on while wearing their club shirt. Fans were left with tears in their eyes as they reacted to the tributes. 7 7 7 7 One said: 'My heart is so full of joy for this man and his little angel.' Another declared: 'He's made sure Xana is with him in victory again.' One noted: 'Xana is with you today.' Another added: 'I'm glad he won for her.' Speaking before the final, Enrique revealed that Xana would be with him on the sideline in spirit. Enrique said: 'I remember an incredible photo I have with my daughter, after winning the Champions League, placing a Barca flag on the pitch. 'I wish I could do the same with PSG. She won't be there physically, but she'll be there spiritually and that's very important to me.' After the final whistle, Enrique added: 'Xana is not physically here, but she is always connected to me and she is enjoying this time with us.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store