logo
Iconic '90s Actress, 67, Flaunts Ageless Beauty While Leaving Nothing to the Imagination

Iconic '90s Actress, 67, Flaunts Ageless Beauty While Leaving Nothing to the Imagination

Yahoo20-06-2025

Iconic '90s Actress, 67, Flaunts Ageless Beauty While Leaving Nothing to the Imagination originally appeared on Parade.
, 67, recently flaunted her ageless beauty in a see-through dress for a magazine cover shoot—and she did so while leaving nothing to the imagination.
On June 17, the Basic Instinct star graced Vogue Adria. Although the cover was relatively tame, another snap in the issue showed Stone in a sheer dress revealing her entire chest.
🎬 🎬
In the shot, the iconic '90s actress struck a sultry pose as a large group of men held her up while reaching out to touch her. The Casino bombshell showed off her timeless radiance 30 years after the height of her fame.In March, Stone opened up about aging and learning to love her changing body in process.
'A lot of people give up as they get older,' she told The Sunday Times. 'They let go of their body because it's collapsing anyway, or it's like, 'I'm not defined by my body anymore.' But you still have to love that body.'
Stone, who is a painter, added, 'I joke that my underarms have pleats now. I think, 'Well, I had beautiful arms and now they're strong and painting and like angel wings. So what if they have pleats? Maybe that's what makes them wonderful now.''
Next:
Iconic '90s Actress, 67, Flaunts Ageless Beauty While Leaving Nothing to the Imagination first appeared on Parade on Jun 20, 2025
This story was originally reported by Parade on Jun 20, 2025, where it first appeared.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

MasterChef's Andy Allen reveals secret pact after Jock Zonfrillo's death
MasterChef's Andy Allen reveals secret pact after Jock Zonfrillo's death

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

MasterChef's Andy Allen reveals secret pact after Jock Zonfrillo's death

Australian TV fans were left in shock in May 2023 when it was revealed that fan favourite MasterChef judge Jock Zonfrillo had tragically died. The celebrity chef's passing came right as the series was to start airing it's 15th season, marking Jock's third year at the helm of the show. During his time on the series, he became extremely close friends with fellow judge Andy Allen, leaving the former MasterChef winner shattered by his untimely death. Andy has since revealed that he was one of the first people Jock's wife, Lauren Zonfrillo, called and leaned on after she received the devastating news. Jock's body was discovered in Zagame's House, a hotel in Melbourne, by police after conducting a welfare check. Lauren and the two children she shares with Jock, Alfie and Isla, were in Rome at the time of his death waiting for him to catch a flight the following day to begin their dream of splitting their time between Australia and Italy. Andy has now shared the moment he received the phone call from Lauren about Jock's tragic passing during an appearance on A Life of Greatness with Sarah Grynberg. The MasterChef judge described Jock's death as "the hardest thing I've ever been through", adding that Jock "was like the older brother that I never had," and that he learned so much from him and not just about cooking and food. RELATED: MasterChef's Andy Allen shares heartbreaking message to Jock Zonfrillo MasterChef fans 'heartbroken' after surprising tribute to Jock Zonfrillo: 'Wasn't expecting that' MasterChef's Andy Allen wasn't sure he'd return to show after Jock: 'Felt so wrong' "I just learned tonnes, and so, for him to pass away, it was shocking – A) that's my birthday, the 30th of April," he said. "B) I was with him the day before, I was the last person to see him, I had lunch [with him]. And then C) for it to play out in the public eye, it was crazy. The first 24 hours was something that I would never want to relive in my life." He added, "I remember Loz calling me from Rome, because the last bit of publicity that Jock had to do was on the launch day... and then Jock was on a plane to go and live in Rome for six months with the kids, and this was their dream to set up six [months] in Australia, six [months] in Rome... They'd been working on that for such a long time. "And I get a call at about 4:30 in the morning from Lauren in hysterics, and telling me what had happened. That Jock had passed away," Andy recalled. "I was then like, and I suppose this is my coping mechanism, but I was like, 'OK, what do you need?' And she was like, 'I just don't know what to do, because he's got a lot of press to do this morning, and I had a bit of press to do as well, and I was like, 'OK, I'll go do his press.' Because she didn't want to go to [Channel] Ten and [say] this has happened, like, she needed to kind of get a plan together and deal with it." Andy continued, saying that knowing Jock had died while doing his press was incredibly difficult. He explained that he was living in Carlton at the time and when he was on his way to do press that day, of all the ways his Uber driver could go, he passed Zagame's House where Jock had died. "I was trying so hard to get in the zone and get done what I needed to do, and somehow did this press until nine o'clock and obviously hadn't told anyone, and that was like step one, get that done, then start the grieving process," he explained. Andy explained that he did everything he could to be there for Lauren and Jock's children that it "prolonged my grieving process". He shared that there was a moment where he and his wife were in Europe together and it was Jock's birthday and a few other big moments had just happened, and he "just lost it". "I just broke down," he said. "And I think from then on, I wasn't okay, I realised I wasn't a great husband, I wasn't good to the people that are around me. And I just think it was because of that first period of just, like, looking out for everyone else, making sure that they're okay, I realised that I hadn't really grieved myself. And then it was like, yeah, I needed to work on myself, because I wasn't an amazing person." Andy also shared that he was asked by Lauren to stand beside Jock's daughter Ava while she gave her eulogy on the day of his funeral. He said, "Jock's funeral was another tough one, but I'm proud of the part that I could play – for Loz to go, 'Stand next to Ava, if she needs you to take over, take over,' and the absolute legend crushed it, she didn't need me." View this post on Instagram A post shared by Lauren Zonfrillo (@laurenzonfrillo) Andy also added that it feels "really special" to know that he has had a positive impact on Jock's children and that he always tries to stay involved in their lives. He finished by saying he is "in awe of how Lauren's handled the whole situation." SHOP: 🍅 Aussie mates' business idea to take on big supermarkets: '44% cheaper than Coles' 🧽 Aussie mum's $6 solution to most hated household chore: 'It smells incredible' 🩲 'Favourite' Aussie brand slashes prices by 30 per cent: 'Available in XS to 2XL' Lauren, meanwhile, has praised Andy for the "safety and care" he brings to her and her children in a poem she shared on Instagram. She wrote, "You are strong and unknowingly wise, you have done anything I ask, all unreasonable on reflection, but you turn up for us, every time."

The Anna Wintour Effect: How To Build An Iconic Brand Legacy In 2025
The Anna Wintour Effect: How To Build An Iconic Brand Legacy In 2025

Forbes

time2 hours ago

  • Forbes

The Anna Wintour Effect: How To Build An Iconic Brand Legacy In 2025

Anna Wintour at The 78th Annual Tony Awards held at Radio City Music Hall on June 08, 2025 in New ... More York, New York. (Photo by John Nacion/Variety via Getty Images) Before social media gave leaders an opportunity to brand themselves, I've long said Anna Wintour was leading the conversation. As the legendary Editor-in-Chief of Vogue and global chief content officer of Condé Nast, Wintour spent decades building her brand and shaping the public conversation through sheer taste, quiet control, and unapologetic decision-making. From helping launch Christian Lacroix to championing Michael Kors and Giorgio Armani, her editorial decisions didn't just define fashion—they solidified her status as one of business's most powerful personal brands and one of fashion's most iconic and influential leaders. LONDON, ENGLAND - FEBRUARY 20: Queen Elizabeth II and Anna Wintour attend the Richard Quinn show ... More during London Fashion Week February 2018 on February 20, 2018 in London, England. (Photo by Tristan Fewings/BFC/Getty Images) And she did it all without ever pandering to public opinion. Anna Wintour masterfully built a personal brand unlike anyone else in fashion. In doing so she has become a living, breathing embodiment of the rules of The Kim Kardashian Principle. While other editors navigated the daily grind in a visible state of exhaustion, Wintour, with her signature bob, dark sunglasses, and famously enigmatic composure, cultivated an air of mystery and authority that few could emulate. Her unwavering control and sharp decisiveness weren't just traits; they were brand pillars that made her instantly recognizable and endlessly fascinating. And when others in the industry relied on warmth and social charm, Wintour's cool, almost regal distance became her superpower — a living embodiment of exclusivity and taste — and a clear message to all that she wasn't in the business of being liked and had no fear in being different. Wintour stood apart as a true icon — the ultimate curator not only of style, but of her own myth. So what can we learn from one of the most iconic, enduring and inspiring business brands of our time? Here's what I believe made Anna Wintour iconic—and that every business leader would benefit from taking seriously. Be Consistent — Even When It's Unpopular Vogue's April 2014 cover, photographed by Annie Leibovitz. Whether she was putting Cindy Crawford and the supermodels of the eighties on her covers, turning fashion's biggest night, the Met Gala into a cultural juggernaut alongside the Costume Institute, or insisting on couture in an era of fast fashion, Wintour never wavered. Take 2014. Anna Wintour broke the internet (and the hearts of many die-hard core Vogue fans) when she placed Kim Kardashian on the cover of American Vogue—alongside Kanye West. Critics slammed it and the Fashion Wire Press called it 'a cultural misstep.' But Wintour didn't flinch where other leaders would have easily crumbled. Because she saw what only a few others did at that stage: Kim Kardashian wasn't just a reality star—she was a new reality standard. A self-made brand, a pioneer with unmatched digital influence. In a leadership landscape obsessed with flexibility, Anna Wintour's leadership style wasn't that of chasing approval but leading the culture. She showed us the value of a steadfast vision. And I'd say, her sunglasses were far more than just a signature—they were a symbol of her inner strength as a leader and her unshaken clarity. And research would agree. Maintaining consistent branding fosters trust and recognition—cornerstones of loyalty and long-term engagement. A Lucidpress case study found that brands with consistent presentation across channels see up to 23% higher revenue. Additionally, Forbes emphasizes that consistency enhances credibility, supports recognition, and boosts customer loyalty. Define Your Narrative—Or Someone Else Will WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 4: Anna Wintour, Editor-in-Chief of Vogue, receives the Presidential Medal ... More of Freedom by U.S. President Joe Biden in the East Room of the White House on January 4, 2025 in Washington, DC. President Biden is awarding 19 recipients with the nation's highest civilian honor. President Biden is awarding 19 recipients with the nation's highest civilian honor. (Photo by) Wintour's precision bob, Chanel suits, and icy restraint created a powerful persona but her level of transparency made her the editor of all fashion editors and a living logo. Where other editors would remain strategically coy. Anna Wintour didn't shy away from her political biases. As many of you know, I've spoken at length about the power of polarizing brands before. She put Michelle Obama on the cover twice (2009 and 2013) which was risky for a fashion magazine but in the process solidified Wintour as a political influencer as much as a fashion one. She also fundraised for Democratic candidates, blurring lines between editorial independence and political power. In the Hollywood blockbuster, The Devil Wears Prada, Meryl Streep's Miranda Priestly—allegedly modeled on Wintour—became a cinematic shorthand for power, polish, and control. She entered the cultural vernacular through building her brand in a mythological and culturally relevant way. And while Wintour never confirmed the connection. She didn't need to. And it was this exact brand that took her through the high and lows of Vogue's sales and CondeNast's profitability calls. Where other lesser known executives were axed by the waist side, Wintour's power brand made her unshakeable and unbreakable, and in the cut throat world of editing—unthrowoutable. The lesson? Mystery creates magnetism. In an age of under or overexposure, curation is always currency. Wintour didn't just make herself an icon she made icons of fashion photographers like Peter Lindbergh and Richard Avedon. Who can forget the Wintour-commissioned now legendary Lindbergh shoot in January 1990 for the cover of British Vogue featuring Linda Evangelista, Naomi Campbell, Cindy Crawford, Tatjana Patitz, and Christy Turlington. The image is often credited with launching the "supermodel" era and remains one of the most iconic fashion images ever created. And in addition to making Wintour allegedly broke careers too—most famously of Vogue editors Grace Mirabella and André Leon Talley—according to their interviews and memoirs anyways. Whatever the truth, Wintour understood the power of shaping narrative in a direct and transparent manner. And while inside Condé Nast, she earned nicknames like 'Nuclear Wintour' because of her reputation for firing people abruptly there is no doubt that from launching designers through the Fashion Fund to championing emerging talent, she was in charge of directing her story, not just starring in it—and by discovering and elevating people, not tearing them down. Naomi Campbell, Linda Evangelista, Tatjana Patitz, Christy Turlington and Cindy Crawford. What do I make of all this mystique? There is enormous power in overexposure as there is in mystique. As long as it's done authentically. You don't need to show everything but you do need to take risks and shape what matters when it comes to your personal brand. Numerous research into brand mystique shows that being authentically elusive can drive engagement and demand. One LinkedIn analysis highlights that mystery—as seen in 'anti‑advertising' strategies—creates intrigue and emotional pull, prompting audiences to seek deeper connections. Turn Gatekeeping Into Gravitas NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 05: (L-R) Anna Wintour, Met Gala Chair, and Colman Domingo and Lewis ... More Hamilton, Met Gala Co-Chairs, attend the 2025 Met Gala Celebrating "Superfine: Tailoring Black Style" at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 05, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by) Gatekeeping has become a dirty word but Anna Wintour made it a power strategy with her power brand. From Milan Fashion Week to Paris couture, she reigned with restraint. If you were seated at her Met Gala, you weren't just seen—you were sanctified. Guests like Oprah Winfrey, Gigi Hadid, and Kanye West didn't just attend—they abided by her codes—and felt privileged for the blessing. That exclusivity? It wasn't arrogance. It was personal branding at its finest baaed on one of Wintour's key branding pillars. And that setting of a vision and aligning people towards that vision—especially those who typically march to their own drum beat—is the textbook Harvard Business School definition of effective leadership. The September Issue—Vogue's blockbuster annual release—often ran over 800 pages and became fashion's holy text. And the 2009 documentary of the same name proved what insiders already knew: Wintour didn't just reflect trends. She ordained them. And as leaders back then scrambled to pretend to 'make everyone feel included,' Wintour had no shame in reminding us that selectivity can also create significance. When everyone's invited, no one feels special—and she was willing to take the brunt of this stance for decades. Scarcity isn't just psychological—it's commercial. A paper in Psychology & Marketing concluded that limited-edition scarcity (time-bound or quantity-based) significantly enhances perceived value and purchase intent among consumers. Meanwhile, luxury brand playbooks affirm that exclusivity and scarcity heighten prestige, deepen emotional bonds, and support sustainable growth. NEW YORK - JUNE 19: (L-R) Actors Stanley Tucci, Meryl Streep, Adrian Grenier, Anne Hathaway, Emily ... More Blunt and Daniel Sunjata attend the 20th Century Fox premiere of The Devil Wears Prada at the Loews Lincoln Center Theatre on June 19, 2006 in New York City. (Photo by) The Enduring Blueprint For Personal Brand Power As Anna Wintour prepares to step away from her daily oversight of American Vogue into a new role at Condé Nast after more than three decades at the helm of Vogue, the legendary editorial director leaves behind more than a fashion legacy that other fashion editors would die for—she leaves a proven case study in personal branding. In a world obsessed with relatability, Anna Wintour doubled down on refinement. When Wintour declared chic dead, she wasn't mourning a loss — she was proving that her own brand was bigger than any trend. She didn't chase trends. She created them. She didn't speak often. But when she did, the world listened. She didn't try to be one of the crowd, she was the ultimate outsider. And she was far from a people pleaser. Her collaborations with Christian Dior, Kering Gucci, and Helmut Newton weren't just fashion moments—they were brand moves. And her influence didn't fade with time. It continued to reinforce her iconic status. From left, Italian fashion designer Gianni Versace (1946 - 1997), British-American fashion editor & ... More journalist Anna Wintour, German fashion designer Karl Lagerfeld (1933 - 2019), and French fashion designer Christian Lacroix attend a party for the 'Gang of Three' during Fall Fashion Week at the Paramount Hotel, New York, New York, September 7, 1990. (Photo by) Because real branding isn't about turning heads at the Met Gala or chasing clicks or shouting the loudest in the room. It's about delivering undeniable value. And most importantly? Above all the headlines and building the blueprint for fashion as entertainment. Above elevating fashion's global influence and transforming fashion from an elite, insider world into a global cultural force. Above being immortalized in The Devil Wears Prada… want to know what I believe Anna Wintour shows every business leader alive? The sheer power of building your personal brand. Still haven't got one? Do yourself a favor. Go get you sum. Named Esquire's Influencer of the Year, Jeetendr Sehdev is a media personality and leading voice in fashion, entertainment, and influence, and author of the New York Times bestselling phenomenon The Kim Kardashian Principle: Why Shameless Sells (and How to Do It Right).

From Twinning Moments to Mickey Mouse Ears—11 Street Style Trends From the Happiest Place on Earth (the Spring 2026 Menswear Shows)
From Twinning Moments to Mickey Mouse Ears—11 Street Style Trends From the Happiest Place on Earth (the Spring 2026 Menswear Shows)

Vogue

time3 hours ago

  • Vogue

From Twinning Moments to Mickey Mouse Ears—11 Street Style Trends From the Happiest Place on Earth (the Spring 2026 Menswear Shows)

In Milan and Paris this season, when the temperature wasn't creeping up past 90° it was deluging, with walls of water falling from the sky. Not that any of that was going to stop the street stylers from dressing to impress. Who could fail to notice all the twinning looks? On both real-life twins, as well as on friends, and even mothers and sons like Helen Lasichanh and her child with Pharrell Williams, Rocket. Football (and football jersey) fever was ramped up with the FIFA World Cup prelude tournaments taking place this summer, and a similar celebratory spirit extended to showgoers who looked like they were ready to head off to Disney—except they were actually on their way to the Comme des Garçons Homme Plus show. We also noticed scarves worn like babushkas, a style choice as practical as it was chic, given the heat, and sarongs, which hit the streets even before Julian Klausner made such a splash with them at his debut menswear show for Dries Van Noten. Below, the 11 street style trends from the spring 2026 menswear shows. Seeing Double Twinning looks are always fun, especially if it's with your IRL lookalike.

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