Zoey Deutch Wears 'Titanic'-Esque Necklace to the Golden Globes
110 carats of diamonds and sapphires. I repeat: 110 carats.
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A flared mustard jumpsuit. The 1997 disaster epic Titanic. If you were dressing for the Golden Globes, would these be on your mood board? If not, more fool you—because Zoey Deutch, of Netflix's The Politician fame, brought those elements together on the Globes red carpet, and did it work. Deutch slicked back her hair and wore a Fendi Couture made-to-measure wool jumpsuit with a deep V to ensure that the focus was on her necklace, a giant, glittering pièce de résistance with a deep blue stone, and the matching earrings. In a tweet, Harry Winston noted that Deutch was wearing more than 110 carats of diamonds and sapphires from the jeweler.
Deutch and her Politician castmates are nominated for an Emmy for the best comedy or musical TV show of the season. If you didn't immediately recognize Deutch as one of the show's stars, don't feel bad—she's virtually unrecognizable in The Politician, where she plays a high schooler who falls victim of her grandmother's Munchausen's by proxy. She's makeup-free and waiflike in the show, but could not look more glam on the red carpet tonight.
Here's the Titanic-esque necklace in all its glory:
And here's the mustard jumpsuit, which—somehow—goes perfectly with it:
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Jenny is the Digital Director at Marie Claire. A graduate of Leeds University, and a native of London, she moved to New York in 2012 to attend the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. She was the first intern at Bustle when it launched in 2013 and spent five years building out its news and politics department. In 2018 she joined Marie Claire, where she held the roles of Deputy Digital Editor and Director of Content Strategy before becoming Digital Director. In her spare time, she writes fiction: her first novel EVERYONE WHO CAN FORGIVE ME IS DEAD was published in February 2024 and became a USA Today bestseller. She has also written extensively about developmental coordination disorder, or dyspraxia, which she was diagnosed with when she was nine.