Emma Stone has received a lot of hype for her role in Yorgos Lanthimos's Poor Things and is slated to have a good awards season this year. So, naturally, that comes with a red-carpet wardrobe fit for a winner (she is a Louis Vuitton girl, after all). The actress gave fans a sneak peek at her awards show fashion at the 2024 Palm Spring International Film Festival Awards, where she wore a unique and sophisticated take on a power suit.
On Thursday, the Oscar-winning actress arrived at the event in a custom LV look that included a bespoke, ankle-length silk duster with an intricate black-and-white pattern and bedazzled lapels and arm cuffs. She styled the statement piece with an ivory silk blouse (with crystal buttons), black satin trousers with a white detail along the hem, and a matching bolo tie. Stone accessorized with asymmetrical diamond earrings and two gold broaches pinned to the lapel of her jacket. Black sandal heels completed the look.
The star's signature red hair was perfectly coiffed into a flipped-out bob that she parted to the side and tucked behind her ears. She kept her glam classy and straightforward with dewy skin, black eyeliner, and a peach lip.
Stone didn't just win on the red carpet — she also took home the Achievement Award for an actress for her work in Poor Things. Lanthimos and her co-star Mark Ruffalo presented her with the honor, and Stone gave a powerful speech about the narrative surrounding women in Hollywood.
"When I first moved to L.A., I went to one of those general meetings that they sometimes send you to, and an executive told me that for male actors, it's a marathon, not a sprint," she said, referring to the advice she once received from an unnamed figure in the industry. "And in his eyes, for women, it was a sprint, not a marathon. And that was 20 years ago."
Stone added that many women in the industry, to whom she looks up, have only proven that belief wrong over the years.
"And I realize that advice is total garbage because the majority of the women that I look up to in this industry, many of whom are in this room, have proven that as time goes on, life and work only get more interesting and more fulfilling," she said.