logo
How Zendaya and Anna Sawai Accidentally Twinned in Tailored White Suits at 2025 Met Gala: ‘Great Minds'

How Zendaya and Anna Sawai Accidentally Twinned in Tailored White Suits at 2025 Met Gala: ‘Great Minds'

Yahoo08-05-2025
Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience.
Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience.
Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience. Generate Key Takeaways
Zendaya and Anna Sawai both interpreted the 2025 Met Gala theme, 'Superfine: Tailoring Black Style,' in similar ways, but with different references. At Monday's event, the two actresses showed up in crisp white tailored suits and coordinated hats, creating a twinning moment on the red carpet.
Styled by Law Roach, Zendaya's outfit featured a custom Louis Vuitton suit and Bulgari jewelry. It included a vest with small silver buttons and a button-up shirt and coordinated tie for a wholly monochrome look.
More from WWD
Different fashion icons, including Diana Ross and Bianca Jagger, inspired Zendaya's look.
Diana Ross in 'Mahogany.'
On the red carpet, Zendaya watched Ross enter the event and said, 'She's the reference!' Ross wore a similar look in 'Mahogany' (1975).
On Instagram, Law Roach revealed his inspiration from Jagger's 1971 wedding suit for Zendaya's look.
Mick and Bianca Jagger at their wedding in 1971.
Jagger was known for favoring tailored silhouettes in her public appearances. During her wedding to Mick Jagger, she ditched the traditional wedding dress for a white suit made by Yves Saint Laurent.
Meanwhile, Anna Sawai's Met Gala outfit featured a custom Dior suit and Cartier jewelry. The look was a nod to '70s tailoring and could also be interpreted as a reference to Ross. Sawai was styled by Karla Welch, who also dressed Ross' daughter, Trace Ellis Ross, for the event.
Anna Sawai
On Instagram, Welch commented on the similarities between Sawai's and Zendaya's outfits. 'We can add homage to Zendaya as well,' she wrote. The stylist also tagged Law Roach in a different post, saying, 'Great minds.'
The 2025 Met Gala, held Monday at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, featured the theme 'Superfine: Tailoring Black Style.' The event highlighted Black dandyism and menswear, with a 'Tailored for You' dress code. Cochairs include Colman Domingo, Lewis Hamilton, A$AP Rocky, Pharrell Williams and Anna Wintour.
View Gallery
Launch Gallery: Met Gala 2025 Red Carpet Arrivals Photos, Live Updates
Best of WWD
Sign up for WWD's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'I'm Not Afraid Any More.' Joy Sunday On Wednesday & Growth Between Seasons
'I'm Not Afraid Any More.' Joy Sunday On Wednesday & Growth Between Seasons

Refinery29

time3 minutes ago

  • Refinery29

'I'm Not Afraid Any More.' Joy Sunday On Wednesday & Growth Between Seasons

Joy Sunday glides into the lobby of The Whitby Hotel in New York City's midtown donning a caramel corset and flouncy Emilio Pucci mini skirt. Sunday's presence and her features are strikingly captivating, but she doesn't need the striped blazer or greenish-blue contacts she wears to suit up for her role as Bianca Barclay on Netflix's Wednesday to turn heads in real life. It's clear that Sunday's confidence gives life to Bianca, the siren with the power to mesmerize and persuade even the most strong-willed. Bianca is Sunday's first role as a main character in a TV series. And with the show being Netflix's most watched English language original series ever, she hit the ground running. Now going into a new season — the first four episodes premiere today, Wednesday, August 6 — Sunday assures you, me, and everyone else watching that she isn't stopping. At all. 'I'm being very strategic about how I'm moving forward, because I'm not losing this platform,' the 28-year-old New York native said matter of factly. 'I'm taking it to the end, and I want to take others with me. It's not a threat, but it's a promise.' ' I'm taking it to the end, and I want to take others with me. It's not a threat, but it's a promise. joy sunday on acting beyond 'wednesday' ' In Season 1, we're introduced to Bianca as a popular student at Nevermore Academy who has control over her powers, despite the mistrust she faces from others, including her ex. When Wednesday (Jenna Ortega) shows up, they share a brief rivalry before Bianca joins her investigation into the mayor's death. Season 2 goes deeper into Bianca's vulnerability, Sunday explained. Bianca's past comes back to haunt her and she begins reckoning with her relationship with her mother, a siren who uses her powers to scam and wants her daughter to follow suit. 'In Season 2, she's trying to hide herself and conceal what's going on in the background, and so she's really having to come to terms with what she really didn't want to do in Season 1,' Sunday said. 'Now she's being forced to [be a] more compassionate individual. Because that's something that she judged her mom, Gabrielle (Gracy Goldman), for so heavily in Season 1, and that now she finds herself in the same position.' Addressing motherhood wounds plays a huge part in Season 2 overall. Viewers will see most of the main characters' relationships with their moms, for better or worse. As Bianca navigates her own challenges at school, she's now faced with the task of protecting Gabrielle, a theme the teen experienced in their relationship growing up. Sunday said she appreciates the duo's redemptive arc and the opportunity to find healing for them. ' Young Black women are forced to mature faster than anyone else is to understand their relationship to the world... I think that's why it's so special to get to see Bianca need help and to eventually learn to ask for it. joy sunday ' Despite this being a fantastical world, Sunday believes that forgiveness is important to see. Especially for Black girls who often have to mature faster than others. 'Young Black women are forced to mature faster than anyone else is to understand their relationship to the world and to the family, how the world sees them and how they see themselves,' Sunday passionately stated. 'I think that's why it's so special to get to see Bianca need help and to eventually learn to ask for it. And it's also nice to see people come to her aid without her asking for it, and to see people advocate for her as well.' Though Bianca's confidence may have wavered a bit since the first season, Sunday's has only grown. Three years ago when Wednesday first premiered, Sunday was still new to doing press runs and red carpets. 'I almost felt like I needed to play a role or to fit in terms of how I was presenting myself,' she admitted. That feeling has faded as she's gotten her reps in for projects like Rise (2023) and Under The Influencer (2024). But with the writers and actors strike in 2023 and a shaky Hollywood economy, Sunday admits that work hasn't been as steady. Thankfully, becoming a global ambassador for Lancome has helped sustain her and her family. 'It's been a journey of working my way back to this feeling of confidence and this feeling of, I've got some shit to do,' she explained. 'I've been through trials and tribulations, but I think it's really an important part of the actor's journey to share that it's not always going to be the 'hurry up.' Sometimes it's going to be the 'wait.'' This isn't looking like a 'wait' season for Sunday, however. In February, Deadline announced that the actor would be joining the HBO limited series DTF St. Louis. And ahead of its Season 2 premiere, Netflix renewed Wednesday for a third season. Going forward, Sunday is prepared to show the industry more of what she's made of. She's eyeing more fantasy and supernatural roles and some action. (She's specifically manifesting Interview With the Vampire and Ghost Dog 2.) In this era, Sunday knows she's more than good. 'I feel empowered to say I am that much more extensive of an artist, and I'm not afraid to show that,' she said. 'In Season 1, I was kind of afraid of having to fit in the boxes. I wanted to make sure that everything would go well, but I'm not afraid any more. I'm excited.'

Who Is Leonardo Dicaprio's Girlfriend, Vittoria Ceretti?
Who Is Leonardo Dicaprio's Girlfriend, Vittoria Ceretti?

Cosmopolitan

time32 minutes ago

  • Cosmopolitan

Who Is Leonardo Dicaprio's Girlfriend, Vittoria Ceretti?

We're gonna keep this short and sweet since we know you're here for all the 🍵 on Leonardo DiCaprio's latest girlfriend of *checks calendar* two years (!!!!), supermodel Vittoria Ceretti. While the two have kept things relatively low-key (save for their buzzy mega yacht getaway with Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez...), we're here with absolutely everything you need to know about their relationship status, how they met, and that Leo pic spotted on Vittoria's phone during last year's Victoria's Secret Fashion Show. But first! Let's start with a bit of background. Vittoria was born on June 7, 1998, in a small town outside of Milan called Brescia. At 14, she made her modeling debut at Elite Model Look, aka one of the most distinguished international competitions in the world. And ever since then, she's been seriously booked and busy. Among one of the many highlights of her career, however, was her first beauty contract with Chanel. 'My first contract with Chanel, my beauty contract, that's when I was like, 'What happened, how did I get here?'' she gushed during a candid interview with Vogue. Since then, the supermodel has graced the runways and campaigns of countless top designers, including *takes deep breath* Alexander McQueen, Ralph Lauren, Chanel, Givenchy, Fendi, Prada, Miu Miu, Versace, Valentino Proenza Schouler, Bulgari, Tiffany & Co., and Gucci. Whoah. Yep, as a hugely successful figure in her field, Vittoria cultivated relationships with a buncha famous designers, including Karl Lagerfeld, who passed away in February 2019. Fast-forward to the 2023 Met Gala, which paid tribute to the late celeb via its 'Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty' theme, and the model made sure to be in attendance. Prior to walking the legendary red carpet at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Vittoria took to social media and shared a touching tribute to him in the form of a letter on Instagram. The year? 2023. The event? Leo's Killers of the Flower Moon premiere at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival. Despite meeting at the ultra-exclusive event, however, it wasn't until August of that year that the two were romantically linked thanks to some 👀 pics of the couple on an ice cream date in Los Angeles that dropped. According to an eyewitness who spoke to Page Six, there was most certainly a 'vibe' between the duo just by the 'way they were talking to each other, you could feel the energy.' Well! Then!!!! Oh, and just a few days after, in early September, Leo and Vittoria upped the ante by being spotted dancing in Ibiza, Spain, where the actor reportedly called the supermodel his 'girlfriend.' 'Vittoria is a beautiful girl, but Leonardo is of course surrounded by many beautiful girls most of the time,' an insider told the Daily Mail at the time. 'But he adores her and she him, they have been spending a lot of time together this summer, traveling around on romantic trips.' P.S. When it came to Leo's, erm, track record, the source dished, 'It has obviously led to much chatter within his circle that Leo is ready to hang up his lothario ways. There have been many women pictured with him, partying with him, but what he has with Vittoria is much more serious.' You read that right! In photos shared by Page Six in September 2023, Leo and Vittoria were seen in Milan leaving the Pinacoteca Ambrosiana Museum the day prior alongside the actor's mom, Irmelin Indenbirken. And clearly, the family reunions haven't stopped, because in October 2024, the couple and Leo's parents (aka mom Irmelin and stepfather David Ward) were snapped in Italy enjoying dinner, according to TMZ. Luckily, the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show blessed us with many things—including the tidbit that the supermodel has a small photo of a young Leo from his Growing Pains days on her phone case. Ahem: So 😭 happy 😭 for 😭 her 😭😭😭. But people def thought they were after Vittoria was spotted wearing a silver ring on *that* finger back in March 2024. Despite the 👀 placement, however, multiple sources told TMZ that Leo hadn't proposed. Plus, Vittoria has reportedly had the ring since at least September 2022—aka before the two even began dating—so ¯\_(ツ)_/¯. That said... Back in January 2020, the celeb said 'I do' to Italian DJ Matteo Milleri, though it's believed the two are currently separated. Per Grazia magazine, the two tied the knot in a stunning ceremony in Ibiza, where Vittoria donned a flowy, A-line gown by Jacquemus. '01.06.2020 🤍 from this day forward,' Vittoria penned in the caption of a sweet Instagram carousel of wedding photos. Side note: The supermodel stopped sharing images of Matteo on social media around 2022, which is well before she and Leo met, so do with that what you will! Aaaaaanyway! That's pretty much all we know about Vittoria and her 'ship with Leo, but fear not! This story will be updated with any and all news about the couple.

Why National Book Award winner Jason Mott keeps writing Nicolas Cage into his novels
Why National Book Award winner Jason Mott keeps writing Nicolas Cage into his novels

USA Today

time3 hours ago

  • USA Today

Why National Book Award winner Jason Mott keeps writing Nicolas Cage into his novels

Jason Mott may have found the cure for male loneliness: a cage match. No, we're not talking about MMA or pro wrestling. Twice a year, Mott, the National Book Award-winning author, has about a dozen friends over to his house in North Carolina to watch back-to-back Nicolas Cage movies. That's his kind of 'Cage match.' In a culture lacking male friendship amid the ballooning manosphere, these regular marathons are a healthy way for the group of college friends to make time for each other (and nerd out over "Lord of War.") If you've read Mott's 'Hell of a Book,' which won the National Book Award in 2021, you know where this is going as Cage has a presence in that book (though Mott has never met him, he's just a massive fan). The actor is also mentioned in Mott's new book, a quasi-sequel called 'People Like Us.' Cage is an apt metaphor for 'People Like Us' (out now from Penguin Random House), which often blends the real Jason Mott with a fictionalized version of himself. He's open about some of the real bits in the novel, like speaking at a university where a shooting has just occurred and signing autographs after getting mistaken for Ta-Nehisi Coates and Colson Whitehead, two award-winning authors who are also Black. He's coy about others, like when characters mingle with an unnamed French benefactor and an author named 'Not Toni Morrison.' And this book should be Mott's most meta. 'People Like Us' started out as a memoir; a tongue-in-cheek note to readers is signed by 'The Author (with legal breathing down his neck)'. What happens after you win a National Book Award? In 2021, Mott was sitting alone in an office when he found out he won the National Book Award over Zoom. His 'Hell of a Book' is a commentary on racism and gun violence in America, telling the story of a Black author on a cross-country book tour and a young Black boy living in a rural town in the past. He was up against bestsellers like 'Cloud Cuckoo Land' by Anthony Doerr and 'Matrix' by Lauren Groff. When his girlfriend asked if he wanted company during the ceremony, he said no. 'No, when I lose, I want to cry by myself,' he recalls saying. He laughs as he recounts the aftermath. 'I wound up sitting alone in an office by myself as I won the National Book Award, which sounds very sad when I say it out loud like that.' Suddenly, Mott's quiet year turned into a global tour, 'overpopulated with events.' He became part of a small number of people who can say they've won the esteemed prize. In 'People Like Us,' Mott's character 'the Author' embarks on a similar tour abroad (only called "The Continent") after winning what's referred to as 'The Big One.' On the cover, a tiny character is crushed by a faux gold award emblem. In the book and in real life, the book tour tone shifts after the award. Mott had been used to talking about grief, inspiration and writing process on the road for his resurrection novel 'The Returned.' 'Hell of a Book' came out just a year after George Floyd was killed. Readers wanted to ask him about race and identity. European readers, he recalled, were curious about what it was like to live as a Black man in America. 'The thing I found that was most intriguing was, more than anything, they wanted me to answer for America's sins,' Mott says. 'They would ask questions about why this certain legislature came through, and how I feel about this legislature, and why do I choose to stay in America with all the gun violence? And what does it feel like being a Black person in America, knowing the history of America?' Jason Mott started writing a memoir. It became his new novel. After the tour, he needed to reflect and process. He wanted to write about how it felt to come back to a country riddled with gun violence. He wanted to write about how minority authors sometimes feel 'interchangeable' to the book world. He wanted to write about the surreal aftermath of winning the National Book Award. He started journaling. He had enough to write a memoir – so he did. But when he was a few rounds into revisions, he realized the characters from 'Hell of a Book' were weaseling their way into his story. 'I struggle with a lot of privacy, I struggle with being in the spotlight too much,' Mott says. 'The more I made a memoir, the more difficult it actually became for me as a writer to actually explore the story and explore the ideas.' He's never been a 'sequel guy,' but knew he had more to say with these characters. What would happen if he brought them back and put them into situations that he had experienced? He wasn't sure if it would land with a publisher. Would anyone want to read that? Luckily, he had the 'Big One' under his belt. In 'People Like Us,' Jason Mott leans into a meta story 'People Like Us' is a dizzying, fever-dream of a novel – captivating with wit, satire and heartbreak. It's often hard to tell what's real or not real, but that makes it all the more thrilling to read. Mott, even as a reader, loves "those books that are just on the edge of realism." Writing this book was 'liberating' to Mott, and he took more risks with time jumps, speculative themes and new characters. He could also poke fun at the literary world, which he does heavily. And he's prepared for questions on tour about what's real and what's made up. After all, there are a lot of shocking, often violent moments in this novel. But he's playing it cool. He says it's more fun to let people guess and decide for themselves what he means. 'People oftentimes wonder if there's any pressure that I feel having won the National Book Award, and for me, I think it was exactly the opposite, where any sense of pressure that I might have had about myself as a writer just kind of dissolved into nothing,' Mott says. 'For me, I did the biggest thing that I ever had dreamed of doing in writing in winning the National Book Award. And so after I climb Everest, I don't look for Everest part two … that is enough. From here on out, I just get to have fun with my writing, do what I want to do, experiment, be weird.' Clare Mulroy is USA TODAY's Books Reporter, where she covers buzzy releases, chats with authors and dives into the culture of reading. Find her on Instagram, subscribe to our weekly Books newsletter or tell her what you're reading at cmulroy@

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