
Jamie Lee Curtis, 66, looks incredible in a leggy red mini dress at the world premiere of Freakier Friday in Los Angeles
The actress, 66, who has reprised her role for the sequel to 2003's Freaky Friday, wore a leggy mini dress.
She teamed the bright red number with a pair of nude stiletto heels and topped off her outfit with a glamorous makeup look.
The anticipated movie - which is a sequel to the 2003 film - sees Lindsay Lohan and Jamie embroiled in quadruple chaos as they swap bodies again - 22 years after they first traded places.
Lindsay joined Jamie on stage to speak to a crowd of excited fans during the film festivities.
It's hard to believe it's been 22 years since Lindsay and Jamie portrayed Anna and Tess Coleman in Mark Waters' critically-acclaimed remake of Freaky Friday, which amassed $160.8M at the global box office.
Jamie told People on Tuesday: 'I know I can trust her. I can't say that about a lot of people. I do know that if I tell her something, it's gonna stay with her. We've both been through hard things, because we're alive and life is hard.
'And we're not dead yet. So the truth of our experience together, it belies all of the kind of showbizzy stuff. We connected, and we really stayed connected. And that is special and rare for me.'
The actress added: '"Safe" is a very important word to me. I have to feel safe around people. And Jamie is one of those people for me. Like, I feel very safe with you. I feel safe telling you things. So it's — I know you said "trust," but for me it's "safe."'
The supernatural comedy marks Lindsay's first theatrically released leading role in 18 years after overshadowing her acting career with six court-ordered rehab stints and other Hollywood wild child antics.
The anticipated movie - which is a sequel to the 2003 film - sees Lindsay and Jamie embroiled in quadruple chaos as they swap bodies again - 22 years after they first traded places.
The original film followed a mother and teen daughter (played by Curtis and Lohan, respectively) who magically switch bodies after reading a cryptic fortune cookie.
The follow-up film follows a similar plotline to the first movie, however, it features a huge twist involving Gen Z teenage girls that spells chaos for all involved.
This time round, Lindsay's character Anna is preparing to tie the knot with to Eric Davies (Manny Jacinto), however things are proving difficult as her teenage daughter Harper (Julia Butters) despises Eric's teen girl Lily (Sophia Hammons).
Meanwhile, Lindsay's paycheck for the original Freaky Friday has recently resurfaced — and fans were stunned.
Despite the 2003 film's massive success, earning over $160 million on a $26 million budget, Lohan was paid just $550,000 for her starring role.
It marked a turning point, though — by the time she filmed 2004's Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen, her salary had nearly doubled to a reported $1 million.
Last year, Lohan made a cameo appearance in the musical remake of Mean Girls, reportedly earning $500,000 for the brief role—proof she's moved past her earlier public struggles.
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The Sun
11 minutes ago
- The Sun
Kylie Jenner splashes $500k on fancy olive trees during construction of her Calabasas dream mega-mansion
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Daily Mail
11 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Katie Holmes has passionate conversation on her phone... after ex Tom Cruise is seen holding hands with Ana de Armas
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Telegraph
11 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Sex sells for Sydney Sweeney – and so does being a Republican
It has been a busy few days for people who like getting hysterical about Sydney Sweeney. First came the frenzied outrage in certain Left-wing circles after she starred in a provocative advert for American Eagle jeans; the actress, who is white with blonde hair and blue eyes, was accused of promoting eugenics by riffing on genes and jeans. 'Sydney Sweeney has great jeans,' runs the tagline. Then came reports that the 27-year-old Euphoria and Anyone But You star is a registered Republican, further enraging those who abhor the idea that a young performer could have conservative politics or endorse the liberal bogeyman that is Donald Trump. One particularly hysterical social media critic accused Sweeney of parroting 'Nazi propaganda', while others variously said the language in the adverts were reminiscent of '1930s Germany' and championing 'white supremacy'. A few years ago, during the peak woke era, such stories would taint a star, who would rush to reverse their way out of things and apologise for any offence that they unwittingly caused for fear that they would suffer incalculable career damage. But woke is waning and it is hard to see this as anything other than confirmation that Sweeney is the hottest, most talked-about film star in the world right now. Wokeism's censorious peak has passed as the movement's worst excesses have been curbed by champions of free speech and feminists who refused to accept new orthodoxy on gender, as well as a sense that many find constant culture wars wearying. Being young is no longer a guarantee of holding progressive views: Trump did better than ever with young voters last year (earning 42 per cent of votes from the under-30s), while polls suggest Reform UK would be the second-biggest beneficiary of the franchise being extended to 16- and 17-year-olds. Sweeney is, in many respects, a throwback to an earlier Hollywood era: conventionally beautiful, aware of it, interested in making mainstream hits and game enough to regularly get her clothes off on camera. 'I am always very supportive of nudity, of sexual scenes, if the story of the character warrants it,' she told Vanity Fair last year. Much of her performance on Saturday Night Live in March last year was focused on her breasts – at Sweeney's insistence. She knows that sex sells – and, in 2025, so might being a Republican. It is less than a year since Trump was re-elected and, for the first time in his three tilts at the presidency, he comfortably won the popular vote. Just by virtue of being a registered supporter of the Grand Old Party in Florida, Sweeney is much closer to the median American than, say, her peers who drank the California Kool-Aid. Trump himself was asked by reporters about Sweeney's apparent support of him on Sunday night. 'She's a registered Republican?' he said. 'Now I love her ad. You'd be surprised how many people are Republicans.' Later, on his Truth Social website, Trump contrasted the fortunes of American Eagle with those of Jaguar, which had a botched rebrand in November and whose chief executive, Adrian Mardell, retired last week; Budweiser, which lost billions of dollars in market value after teaming up with a transgender influencer; and Taylor Swift, who endorsed Kamala Harris. 'Ever since I alerted the world as to what she was by saying on TRUTH that I can't stand her (HATE!). She was booed out of the Super Bowl and became, NO LONGER HOT,' he wrote in his characteristically statesmanlike style. 'The tide has seriously turned – Being WOKE is for losers, being Republican is what you want to be.' The American Eagle share price subsequently surged by 16 per cent. Even if Sweeney, who has not commented on her voting record, is a Republican she is hardly an unthinking Maga headbanger. Over the years she has publicly expressed support for the Black Lives Matter movement and gay rights, while last year she starred as a novice nun in Immaculate, much of which is an unsubtle commentary on how modern society treats women with unwanted pregnancies. 'I don't like getting into political topics, but I do believe that a woman has the right to be able to decide over her body,' she told Flaunt magazine in 2021. we need to do better. the hate in this world needs to end. #BlackLivesMatter — Sydney Sweeney (@sydney_sweeney) May 31, 2020 This desire to not get into political topics is reflected in the films she stars in, which tend to be firmly in the mainstream and provide escapism from the world beyond the cinema. She and Glen Powell (a Texan who it is also speculated tends towards having conservative politics) basically revived the romcom with Anyone But You, a modern-day take on Much Ado About Nothing. Unlike so many Hollywood stars, Sweeney comes from humble beginnings and is almost as far away as it is to get from being a nepo baby. She grew up in Spokane, Washington state, the daughter of a lawyer mother and hospitality worker father; her brother, Trent, is in the US Air Force and stationed in the UK. Sweeney caught the acting bug as a child, after auditioning to be an extra at the age of 11; two years later, her family relocated to Los Angeles as she tried to make it in Hollywood. Life was hard, with the family spending the best part of a year sharing a one-bedroom hotel room as they struggled to make ends meet. They were forced to sell their home in Washington and, by 2016, her parents had divorced and filed for bankruptcy. That modest background has drilled a remarkable work ethic into Sweeney, who works on evenings and weekends and gets four hours' sleep each night. 'There's 24 hours in a day, obviously,' she said earlier this year. 'But I make sure that there are 26 for me.' Sweeney is just as prolific when it comes to advertising. As well as endorsing American Eagle's jeans, she has shilled for Samsung phones and Baskin-Robbins ice cream, as well as selling soap made using some of her own bath water. She is reported to be launching a lingerie brand with backing from Amazon billionaire Jeff Bezos. Her family members, and their apparent politics, have caused her problems in the past. She threw a hoedown-themed 60th birthday party for her mother, Lisa, that became notable when photographs showed that some guests were wearing Trump-style baseball caps with the words 'Make Sixty Great Again' on them. Amid a liberal backlash, Sweeney complained in a post on X that 'an innocent celebration for my mom's milestone 60th birthday has turned into an absurd political statement, which was not the intention'; the following year she said that there had been 'so many misinterpretations' of what had happened. 'The people in the pictures weren't even my family,' she said. 'The people who brought the things that people were upset about were actually my mom's friends from LA who have kids that are walking outside in the Pride parade, and they thought it would be funny to wear because they were coming to Idaho.' For Hollywood the increasingly pugnacious, and litigious, Trump is the 800lb gorilla in the room. There appears to be a tacit acceptance among the entertainment industry's elites that the woke shift that was partly sparked by the #MeToo and Black Lives Matter movements went so far that it alienated a large swathe of possible viewers. David Ellison, the son of Oracle multi-billionaire Larry, managed to secure US government approval for the purchase of Paramount by his Skydance venture partly by promising to do away with diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) policies. Meanwhile, Disney – whose chief executive, Bob Iger, was an outspoken critic of Trump's policies during his first term – has rowed back on its blatantly progressive plots in an effort to appeal to as broad a cohort of viewers as possible. For instance, it axed a transgender storyline in February's animated series, Win or Lose. 'When it comes to animated content for a younger audience, we recognise that many parents would prefer to discuss certain subjects with their children on their own terms and timeline,' a spokesman said in December. Taylor Sheridan – the creator of Yellowstone and its spin-offs – has become arguably the most successful TV showrunner of his generation by providing an underserved market of people who do not want high-handed lecturing from the series they watch. A ranch owner in Texas himself, Sheridan romanticises America and its frontier history, rather than scorning it as many liberals have done in recent years, and has huge audiences for his Western revivals. Country artist Morgan Wallen is one of the biggest music stars in the world for similar reasons. Other studios are embracing religious stories as a way to connect with more conservative viewers, while the genre has the added benefit of being relatively cheap to make but a cash cow. The changing tastes of Hollywood can perhaps be best summed up with how two Trump-adjacent projects have fared in the past couple of years. The Apprentice, Sebastian Stan's unflattering Trump biopic, struggled to get a distributor last year, but Amazon has spent tens of millions of dollars on a documentary about Melania, the first lady. Harrison Ford, the veteran Indiana Jones star, told Variety last month that this vibe shift was inevitable. 'The pendulum doth swing in both directions, and it's on a healthy swing to the right at the moment. And, as nature dictates, it will swing back.' Lest we forget that Ronald Reagan, the president who originally coined the 'Make America Great Again' slogan, was a Hollywood star who served as leader of the Screen Actors Guild for almost as long as he was in the White House. For Sweeney, it appears unlikely that her apparent outing as a Republican will do much, if any, damage to her career or cost her industry friends. Her first film set to be released next year is directed by her Euphoria co-star Colman Domingo, who is gay and black, in which she stars as actress and artist Kim Novak. Appropriately enough, it is called Scandalous!