August: Osage County

fashion news

Michelle Obama Gets Crowned and Cara Delevingne Gets Unzipped

Michelle Obama was crowned The Sunday Times' best dressed.


  • Michelle Obama was crowned The Sunday Times' best dressed. [BuzzFeed]

  • Was Brian Atwood's success written in the stars? "I remember going to this psychic who told me, 'I see you being famous for something to do with feet,'" he said. "It made no sense to me, because, at that point, I hadn't designed shoes." [The Business of Fashion]

  • Victoria Beckham will convert a London grocery store into office space for her eponymous lines. [InStyle UK]

  • Georgina Chapman dished out popcorn at a screening of August: Osage County, an upcoming drama starring Meryl Streep and Julia Roberts. [Page Six]

  • Don't expect many sartorial similarities to Audrey Hepburn in the Broadway production of Breakfast at Tiffany's. "As great as the movie is, we have seen it," said costume designer Colleen Atwood. "So it's time to move on." [InStyle]

  • The first-ever Global Kids Fashion Week has wrapped in London, raising questions about just how appropriate the event really is. [The Daily Beast]

  • Shop the closets of Charlotte Ronson and Lauren Goodman in Vaunte's latest sale. [PS Fashion News Inbox]

  • Justin Timberlake is reportedly leaving William Rast, the clothing label he established with Trace Ayala in 2005. [The New York Post]

  • Cara Delevingne unzips and strips for i-D's special Q&A issue. [i-D online]
Movies

Tony Winner August: Osage County Headed for the Big Screen

The critically acclaimed and insanely well-received Broadway show August: Osage County will be adapted for film, with the playwright Tracy Letts on board to write the screenplay.

The critically acclaimed and insanely well-received Broadway show August: Osage County will be adapted for film, with the playwright Tracy Letts on board to write the screenplay. The show took home five Tony awards and a Pulitzer prize. Variety continues:

August follows one volatile Oklahoma family in the aftermath of its patriarch's unexplained disappearance. Clocking in at more than three hours, the play began to attract buzz during its preem at the Steppenwolf Theater last summer.

There have been no discussions about cast, but producer Jean Doumanian has said, "So many actors and stars have come to see it on Broadway, and we've gotten inquiries. People are enthusiastic about the film version."

It's strange, I've heard nothing but gushing praise for this play from multiple people in the past month or so — and now it's going to be a movie. Have you seen August: Osage County? What did you think?

Source