Skip to main content

Zendaya teases bridal-themed fashion with something old, new, borrowed … and soon, blue?

Zendaya has a few more days to wear something blue.

The actor, promoting “The Drama” with co-star Robert Pattinson around the globe, has — wink wink — worn something old, something new and something borrowed.

It all fits with the wedding theme of “The Drama,” opening Friday, about a Boston couple whose impending nuptials are thrown into chaos by a dark revelation.

Of course, it also dovetails with the bridal theme of Zendaya’s own life, with unconfirmed speculation flying — fed in part by rings she’s been wearing — that she’s already married to Tom Holland.

But back to the fashion: Something old came in Los Angeles on March 17, where the actor wore the same off-the-shoulder Vivienne Westwood Bridal gown — in white, of course — that she wore to the 2015 Oscars. “Our Something Old,” her stylist, Law Roach, posted on Instagram.

At the movie’s March 24 Paris premiere it was time for something new — a white custom Louis Vuitton gown with a very, well, dramatic black bow and train cascading down the back.

Two days later for the Italian premiere in Rome, Zendaya sported a borrowed black Armani Privé dress with a plunging neckline framed with stones, earlier worn by Cate Blanchett at the Venice Film Festival. (“somethingborrowed,” Roach posted.)

As for something blue — the color may have been subtly referenced by her flowing, multi-hued floral Alexander McQueen dress worn on Jimmy Kimmel’s show March 16. But that was a little TOO subtle.

Which is why many expect the star to soon be singing the blues.

Iran war disrupts US small businesses with shipping complications and higher costs

NEW YORK (AP) — The Iran war is making life more difficult for small business owners across the country, who are grappling with shipping complications, higher costs and consumers tightening their grip on their wallets. A shoe designer is struggling to import its shoes from Vietnam; a pistachio grower has millions of dollars worth of pistachio exports sitting in the water; a home landscaper in Kansas City is stockpiling fertilizer as prices skyrocket; and a Chicago electronics store owner is facing pain at the pump. Small business owners say the severe supply chain disruptions during the pandemic were worse — but they fear that if the war stretches on for months, it might start to come close. “The costs are rising, the routes are changing, and capacity is tightening. It’s all happening at the same time, and that’s a perfect storm for small businesses," said Brandon Fried, executive director of the Airforwarders Association, a trade group for U.S companies that move cargo through the supply chain on all modes of transport.
Read Next Story