Suffragette

  • NewsAlexandra Perron

    Get Carey Mulligan’s Retro Waves and Classic Red Lip

    Carey Mulligan in NYC for the premiere of ‘Suffragette.’ (Photo: Getty Images) Suffragette star Carey Mulligan knows how to work a red carpet. The Oscar-nominated actress (and new mother) stepped out for her new film’s NYC premiere this week rocking cool retro waves and a bold red lip — the perfect fall look.  Hairstylist Jenny Cho was inspired by the vintage feeling of Mulligan’s strapless Alexander McQueen dress, so she opted for a modern version of a Old Hollywood style wave.

  • NewsAlexandra Perron

    Meryl Streep: ‘Women’s Issues Are Men’s Problems’

    I watched on as the women discussed what early 20th century feminists like Emmeline Pankhurst (Streep’s character in the film and a leader of the movement in Great Britain) would think of the state of women’s issues today. Historian Simon Schama moderated the panel and posed this question: If the suffragettes were here today to see the women in the world, what would they say to us?

  • NewsErika Ostroff

    Surprise! Carey Mulligan Returns to the Red Carpet, Minus One Baby Bump

    Carey Mulligan at the premiere for Suffragette in England. Photo: Getty Images Actress Carey Mulligan has built up quite a reputation for being notoriously tight-lipped. She was equally hush-hush about her ultra-private farm wedding in 2012 to musician Marcus Mumford as she was about her pregnancy, which she concealed by wearing strategically fitted gowns on the red carpet. (See: Her loose, black Balenciaga halter dress at the 2015 Met Gala this past May, and a structured maroon gown—also by Bal

  • NewsNoël Duan

    Meryl Streep: ‘There Isn’t a Man in this Audience Who Could Out-Lift Serena Williams’

    Over Labor Day weekend, the first screening for Meryl Streep’s upcoming British period film, Suffragette, opened the Telluride Film Festival. Yahoo Beauty’s editor in chief Bobbi Brown hosted a party afterwards to celebrate the film and the three-time Academy-Award winner. The movie is about the late 19th century and early 20th century women’s movement to gain the right to vote.