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Search resuls for: "Louis Lucero Ii"


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Live Updates: The 2024 Met Gala Is Here
  + stars: | 2024-05-06 | by ( Louis Lucero Ii | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
Although the guest list for the gala is kept strictly under wraps, some famous faces are a surer bet than others. Bad Bunny, Chris Hemsworth, Jennifer Lopez and Zendaya will all be joining Ms. Wintour as co-chairs of the event. The dress code for the gala on Monday night is “Garden of Time,” an apparent reference to a 1962 short story by the British writer J.G. Ballard in which aristocrats living in a walled estate are menaced by the advance of a violent rabble. But the theme also nods to the subject of the spring exhibition, titled “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion.”
Persons: it’s, Anna Wintour, Condé Nast, Bon Appétit, didn’t, Chris Hemsworth, Jennifer Lopez, Zendaya, Wintour, Rihanna, J.G, Ballard Organizations: Metropolitan Museum of Art, Vogue Locations: New York City, British
On Monday night, the Metropolitan Museum of Art will play host to one of the biggest fund-raising events and starriest parties of the year: the annual Costume Institute Benefit or, as it’s been known for years, the Met Gala. The event, which raises millions of dollars for the museum’s self-funding fashion wing, has become known for its audacious red carpet, with a highly exclusive guest list handpicked by Anna Wintour, the longtime Vogue editor and Condé Nast executive. But this year’s event has been unusually shadowed by drama. The union representing employees of Condé Nast publications including Bon Appétit, GQ, Vanity Fair and Vogue escalated the stakes in its long-running contract negotiations on Saturday, telling the company in a video posted on X that if management didn’t meet the union at the bargaining table, its members would “meet you at the Met,” setting up the possibility of a picket line during Vogue’s biggest night. A representative from the New York Police Department said that there were no street closures planned and that the police would have “an adequate security deployment.”
Persons: it’s, Anna Wintour, Condé Nast, Bon Appétit, didn’t Organizations: Metropolitan Museum of Art, Vogue, New York Police Department
In the Metropolitan Opera’s new production of “El Niño,” which reimagines the story of Jesus’ birth and early childhood, there are singing and dancing Virgin Marys, Marys of the land and sea; there’s an Indigenous Mary, a Tropical Mary, a Golden Mary. In the director Lileana Blain-Cruz’s vision, the action takes place across multiple “planes.” It could be a lot to take in. Thankfully for Mr. Levi Blanco, 39, he has developed something of a shorthand while working with Ms. Blain-Cruz, whom he has known since he was an M.F.A. The pair have collaborated several times, including on “The Skin of Our Teeth,” for which Mr. Levi Blanco won a Tony Award in 2022. In the case of “El Niño,” painterly scenery by the set designer Adam Rigg evokes the natural environment.
Persons: El, Jesus ’, Virgin Marys, Marys, Montana Levi Blanco, John Adams, Peter Sellars’s, Lileana Blain, Levi Blanco, . Blain, Cruz, Adam Rigg Organizations: Metropolitan, Yale School of Drama Locations: Mary
The outcry was swift, with 46 Republican senators signing on to a letter condemning the shift. “Allowing casual clothing on the Senate floor disrespects the institution we serve and the American families we represent,” they wrote. But even though the Senate prides itself on a tradition of decorum, expectations of dress in the chamber have been largely governed by norms, rather than by written rules. That flexibility has allowed for notable deviations from the buttoned-up status quo throughout the years. (Seersucker Thursday was also a reminder, according to Mr. Lott, that “the Senate isn’t just a bunch of dour folks wearing dark suits.”)
Persons: Chuck Schumer, , Trent Lott, Lott Locations: London, Milan, Washington, Mississippi, Southern
Barbie: A Visual Dictionary
  + stars: | 2023-07-15 | by ( Louis Lucero Ii | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Maybe you’ve heard there’s a Barbie movie coming out? It is, however, about the 11½ inches of intellectual property that inspired all the madness: the doll itself. Just as remarkable as the ways the doll has changed since then are the ways it hasn’t. Like the characters on “Sesame Street” or “South Park,” Barbie exists alongside us without quite aging with us — reflecting our times, but not our wrinkles. That adaptive consistency may play a role in maintaining her cultural ubiquity (alongside her literal ubiquity), for while the things that make Barbie Barbie may get a face lift every few years, the DNA remains unchanged.
Persons: you’ve, Barbie, Barbie Barbie Organizations: Mattel
This article contains spoilers for Episode 5 of the second season of “And Just Like That …”As “And Just Like That …” nears its halfway point, its creators have sprinkled a series of self-referential winks into the new episode. For a Halloween charity benefit, Carrie (Sarah Jessica Parker) dresses up as Helen Gurley Brown, the former editor of Cosmopolitan and, in some ways, the spiritual predecessor to Bradshaw. Ahead of Episode 5, members of The New York Times’s Styles desk discussed the looks, brands and wigs on display in the latest installment of the series. Louis Lucero II From a costuming perspective, this episode was a little front-loaded, wasn’t it? Charlotte’s Halloween benefit for the fictitious City Parks Conservancy showed us all three ways you can phone in a costume.
Persons: Carrie, Sarah Jessica Parker, Helen Gurley Brown, Bradshaw, Sara Ramirez, Herbert Wexley, Christopher Jackson, George Washington, “ Hamilton ”, Times’s Styles, Louis Lucero Organizations: Cosmopolitan, Broadway, The, Parks Conservancy Locations:
When Seema’s Birkin was taken, it sent me right down the rabbit hole to “Sex and the City,” Season 3, when Carrie’s Fendi Baguette was snatched — and then a very similar Baguette reappeared in this episode. Jeremy Allen Once again, purse as plot point! How was that actually quite large Birkin just lying under shrubbery? JA I was also struck by how Covid really became a plot point for the first time in this series — especially sartorially. Callie Holtermann I caught myself laughing a couple of times during this episode — sometimes with the characters and other times at them.
Persons: Vanessa Friedman, Seema’s Birkin, Carrie’s Fendi Baguette, , Jeremy Allen, Madison Malone Kircher, Louis Lucero, Louis, Birkin, Covid, Carrie, Callie Holtermann Organizations: City, Giuliani’s, York Times Locations: Giuliani’s New York
Quiz: How Well Do You Know Karl Lagerfeld?
  + stars: | 2023-04-28 | by ( Louis Lucero Ii | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Everybody knows that you’re nobody until you’re a Halloween costume, and when it comes to Karl Lagerfeld, there’s no shortage of signifiers for would-be cosplayers to draw on. OK, this one was downright sadistic, but in fact, it was 18th-century France that most fascinated the designer. Mr. Lagerfeld furnished his 18th-century townhouse with 18th-century pieces, arranged in a traditional 18th-century fashion. “The 18th century was very vigorous and healthy,” Mr. Lagerfeld once told Le Monde. “It is because of its energy that I love it, and because it has the proportions that best correspond to the way that a human being should live.”
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