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This Iconic 'Devil Wears Prada' Moment Was Almost Totally Different


Remember that iconic cerulean scene in The Devil Wears Prada? Of course you do: It’s one of Miranda Priestly’s iciest, most savage moments. It takes place after Andy (Anne Hathaway) snickers over a discussion of which belt is best for a shoot. Miranda (Meryl Streep) quickly shuts her down with a monologue about where, exactly, Andy’s sweater came from.

Here’s a clip, in case you forgot:

[embedded content]

Now play the whole thing back in your head and imagine that it’s about her plaid skirt instead of a sweater—because that’s how it went down in an early version of the script.

The Devil Wears Prada screenwriter, Aline Brosh McKenna, shared some intel about the monologue during a discussion at Vulture Festival L.A. this week. We can recite every line of Miranda’s clap back about the origins of Andy Sach’s “lumpy blue sweater” now, but originally McKenna had toyed with the idea of making the lecture about plaid.

“There was a point when [costume designer Patricia Field] thought it was going to be a plaid skirt. I wrote a whole Vivienne Westwood angle—obviously. But there was a sweater, and it was blue. The short version is, they sat on the script for a long time, and I made that script speech longer, longer, longer,” McKenna said. “Then I worked with Meryl [Streep] and [director] David [Frankel] and made it way too long. I sent it to David and said, ‘This is way too long; you’ll never use all of this, but this is what I’ve got.’ I had also sent Meryl a list of blues: lapis, azure, cerulean. She picked cerulean.”

Meryl Streep, of course, nailed the scene, but McKenna said not everyone was pleased with how it turned out. “A lot of the fashion stuff I just made up because none of it was going to be real. It just sounded real,” McKenna said. “After the movie came out, someone was dinging us that it wasn’t based on real fashion stuff.”

Related: Mr. Big Was Going to Die in Sex and the City 3



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Blake Lively Wears a Skirt One Time, Makes Headlines


After spending the last two months convincing us to add suits to our fall wardrobes, Blake Lively has gone and ditched her new signature look for—wait for it—a skirt.

Lively was photographed leaving the Christian Dior offices in Paris this week wearing a printed A-line skirt designed by Maria Grazia Chiuri, an act that would have been fairly uneventful in months past. Blake Lively, a celebrity known for her heightened sense of style, wears a designer’s look…to that designer’s offices? OK!

PHOTO: Philippe Blet/REX/Shutterstock

Now, though, this skirt is considered so newsworthy that it caused a flurry of headlines and tweets in its wake. “Blake Lively Wears a Skirt for the First Time in Months!” the Page Six declared. It’s “a big deal for fans of her fashion,” People magazine noted.

To be fair, this is the first time Lively has been seen publicly wearing something other than a suit in months. It’s a testament to her commitment toward A Simple Favor, her new movie with Anna Kendrick in which her character wears almost exclusively suits. So, throughout the film’s press tour, Lively has shown up on red carpets in all sorts of different takes on the style—velvet suits! neon suits! plaid suits! I guess now that A Simple Favor is officially in theaters, Lively can mix up her look a little more?

Celebrity Sightings in New York City - September 13, 2018

PHOTO: James Devaney

'A Simple Favour' UK Premiere - Red Carpet Arrivals

PHOTO: Mike Marsland

But even though her seemingly endless supply of suits is maybe-probably about promoting her movie, Lively was still quick to call out those who criticized her for them. After an Instagram commenter made a joke about “suit number 1,356,” Lively responded, “Would you note a man wearing lots of suits during a promo tour? So why can’t a woman? Just sayinnnn. No double standard ladies.” The commenter apologized, and Lively replied, “Nothing but love. I don’t expect everyone to like it. Fashion that creates a difference of opinions is the fun part. I totally understand the missed humor. I do the same thing sometimes. Just lookin’ to encourage woman to do what men do without being teased for it. Yes, even in a space as material as fashion. It all starts somewhere…and everyone’s voice counts.”

And if you think Lively is totally done with suits now that she’s added a skirt into the mix, hold up: The same day she wore the Dior skirt, she was back to business as usual:

Blake Lively out and about, Paris, France - 20 Sep 2018

PHOTO: Philippe Blet/REX/Shutterstock

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The Relatable Reason Meghan Markle Never Wears Red Lipstick


Since she first began attending official royal outings with Prince Harry, Meghan Markle has proved time and again that she’s of the “if it ain’t broke” mindset when it comes to her beauty choices. When she finds what looks good—her glowy, natural makeup, that controversy-causing messy bun—she sticks with it. In a new interview with People, Daniel Martin, the Duchess of Sussex’s close friend and mastermind behind her gorgeous wedding day glam, broke down Meghan’s low-key approach to makeup and explained why you’ll never see her straying too far from her favorite peachy-nude lip color.

“The one time she did a red lip, she just didn’t feel comfortable in it,” Martin explained. “She likes to talk and she’s not a fussy person, so she doesn’t want to have to worry about anything.” Makes sense: Who wants to worry about a bright red smudge transferring onto your teeth or feathering out when you’ve got a million cameras trained on you at any minute. And bold colors fade more obviously.

Plus, if your go-to rosy nude was as flattering and versatile as Meghan’s preferred Charlotte Tilbury Matte Revolution shade of “Very Victoria,” why would you even consider trying something new?

PHOTO: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

Meghan Markle Won't Wear Red Lipstick 2

PHOTO: Matt Cardy/Getty Images

Meghan Markle Won't Wear Red Lipstick 3

PHOTO: Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images

Martin also shared that, despite having access to professional makeup artists, Meghan has decided to do her own makeup for her royal engagements. “She’s gotten more comfortable doing her own makeup. She loves makeup and she’s good at it!” he told People. “She’s been doing her makeup herself. She’s not fussy—she’s just trying to get it on and get out the door.”

Her go-to routine? “She likes a stronger eye, her brow is a lot more defined now. But it’s still her,” Martin said. “If anything, she’s going to experiment with different tones, and now that she’s more tan she’ll use warmer colors. But she doesn’t stray too far from her technique, she’s very formulaic with her routine. They have so many engagements, you have to stick with what you know and feel comfortable and confident and just own it.”

You’ve got to stan a relatable, low-maintenance duchess.

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Beyoncé Wears This Highlighter, and No Higher Endorsement Exists


Beyoncé’s cover for the September issue of Vogue dropped on Monday, and the Internet hasn’t stopped talking about it since. From Beyoncé’s overarching creative direction, to Tyler Mitchell (at 23-years old, the publication’s first-ever black cover photographer), to the candid as told to essay, everything came together to solidify its place in history. And while Beyoncé’s glow may have seemed like it was radiating directly from the light inside of her, some important knowledge just dropped: the name of the highlighter responsible for her soft-lit sheen.

It’s all thanks to her makeup artist, Sir John, who broke down exactly how to get the glow.

According to reps for the brand, Sir John started off by prepping Bey’s skin with Marc Jacobs’s Beauty’s Under(cover) Perfecting Coconut Face Primer (recently crowned a Glamour staff fave). Then, he used a two-part step to get that precise “bronzey, rose-gold finish”: First up, Marc Jacobs Beauty’s Dew Drops Coconut Gel Highlighter in Fantasy, which he put on the high points of her face.

After that, he mixed Marc Jacobs Beauty’s Dew Drops Coconut Gel Highlighter in Fantasy with foundation slightly darker than her face for what he calls a “3D cheek.” “It’s all about a glowy contour. Dew Drops are worth their weight in gold. It’s the one thing I have in my bag everywhere. I use it for concerts, for shoots, for tours—I use it religiously,” he said. Finally, Sir John topped off his gorgeous creation with Marc Jacobs Beauty’s Finish-Line Perfecting Coconut Setting Powder.

Dew Drops is no stranger to celebrities’ faces—stars from Selena Gomez, to Cardi B, to Gisele and Janelle Monae have worn the original highlighter and the Fantasy version on the red carpet and beyond. But Sir John’s tip? “Always avoid shimmer on the front of the face. Apply it to your angles for sexiness.” And that, friends, is how you get a Beyoncé-worthy highlight.

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The Genius Reason Why Meghan Markle Wears Her Shoes Too Big


Meghan Markle, a.k.a the Duchess of Sussex, is quickly following in Kate Middleton’s footsteps to become a style icon of her own—whether she’s following the royal dress code or breaking it. Either way, it’s safe to say that the “Meghan Markle Effect” is in full force.

But there’s one particular thing she does that’s been making royal-waters scratch their heads time and time again: She consistently wears shoes that are way too big for her feet. She wore the wrong shoe size as recently as June 19 when she was in Berkshire for the Royal Ascot.

If you peek at photos of Meghan over the past few months, it’s evident this isn’t a one-time mistake by her stylist. After all, everyone has their shoe size memorized. As it turns out, there’s a very good, extremely practical reason for it.

First, however, some photographic evidence.

On her first solo trip with the Queen on June 14:

PHOTO: Samir Hussein

At a memorial service in St Martin-in-the-Fields, London on April 23:

Stephen Lawrence memorial service

PHOTO: WPA Pool

In Lisbern, Northern Ireland with Prince Harry on March 23:

BRITAIN-NIRELAND-ROYALS

PHOTO: ARTHUR EDWARDS

At her engagement announcement photo call in November:

Announcement Of Prince Harry's Engagement To Meghan Markle

PHOTO: Karwai Tang

According to The Sun, wearing her shoes too big is a conscious sartorial decision by Meghan Markle. “Celebs often go a size up, or even two, in the shoe department when they’re at an event or on the red carpet, and it’s for one reason we can all relate to — to avoid blisters,” fashion expert Harriet Davey told the online newspaper.

“The swelling can cause blisters and in the long run bunions… ” she told The Sun.

You’d think walking in shoes that are way too large would be a difficult task, but as Davey told the Sun, “a trick of the trade is to stuff the toe with padding like tissue or cotton wool, and this can be taken out once they feel like they need a bit more room in their shoes.”

If it means we’ll never get blisters ever again, this might be one royal habit we can get behind.

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Melania Trump Wears Jacket That Says ‘I Really Don't Care, Do U?’ Before Border Visit


On Thursday, First Lady Melania Trump flew to Texas, making an unannounced visit to the Upbring New Hope Children’s Shelter, which is housing several children who were separated from their parents at the U.S. border. Though meant as a gesture of good will, the purpose of the trip would soon become eclipsed after people got a look at the jacket she wore to board her plane in Maryland.

At the Andrews Air Force Base, Trump was photographed getting out of her car and onto the jet wearing a green military-style jacket with lettering scrawled across the back in white. Daily Mail was the first outlet to decipher the slogan as reading, “I really don’t care, do u?,” and attributing the style to a jacket that was once sold at fast-fashion retailer Zara.

PHOTO: Andrew Harnik

Melania Trump

PHOTO: Andrew Harnik

Melania Trump

PHOTO: Andrew Harnik

This would later be reported by journalists following FLOTUS’ visit.

Though the jacket is no longer available on Zara’s website, it reportedly retailed for $39.

FLOTUS changed her outerwear on the flight—she was wearing a light pink cargo jacket when she landed in Texas—but the damage had already been done: Once images of Mrs. Trump hit the internet, people took to social media to share their outrage at the optics of what most likely is a glaringly tone-deaf fashion decision.

In response to the backlash, Stephanie Grisham, the First Lady’s communications director, shared with the White House pool reporters via email: “It’s a jacket. There was no hidden message.” She also added that she hoped the media would instead focus on Trump’s visit, rather than her outfits, “Much like her high heels last year.”

The heels Grisham is referring to were the sky-high stilettos Trump wore when she accompanied her husband to see the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey in Texas—then, too, people believed her decision to wear high-end designer shoes with an impractical heel was rather insensitive (not to mention, inappropriate for a disaster zone).

Still, even with this statement, many were not convinced of the fact that there was no message to be gleaned from the First Lady’s wardrobing choice.

As to what she hoped to accomplish on her visit to Texas, Girsham shared with pool reporters that Trump “…wants to see what’s happening for herself and she wants to lend her support, executive order or not. The executive order certainly is helping pave the way a little bit, but there’s still a lot to be done.”

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