Amy Schumer sported a dark color while joking that she was "here to drink" at the 2022 Met Gala
"Everyone is always at home [they ask] 'What will Amy be wearing this year? "They're on the edge of their seats," teased the comedian entering the Met Gala. On Monday night, the 40-year-old Life and Beth star kept her...
Updated: 49 months ago2 min read
Amy Schumer made her fashion statement!
"Everyone is always at home [they ask] 'What will Amy be wearing this year? "They're on the edge of their seats," teased the comedian entering the Met Gala.
On Monday night, the 40-year-old Life and Beth star kept her cool at the Costume Institute Gala at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, modeling a black double-breasted gown with an open-neck coat by Gabriela Hearst. She added accessories with cat-eye sunglasses and black heels with laces.
Sumer (who previously directed the most prominent fashion nights she attended in 2016 and 2017) kept the feel down while speaking with La La Anthony on Vogue's official red carpet and joked that style watchers couldn't wait to see what she wore.
'Everyone's always at home [they ask] [What's Amy going to wear this year?'' They're on the edge of their seats,' teased the comedian who got up from your cesarean scar and stepped onto this rug, right?' Am I right?" Amused, Anthony, 39, asked Sumer to define what an evening gown with a Gold Plated Glamor white tie meant to him. The Trainwreck actress replied: "vibrator."
The Sumerians were among the first to arrive at the Met Ball in 2022.
Which is being hold on the first Monday of May for the first time in two years, after being expelled over COVID-19 fears. This year's theme is "In America: An Anthology of Fashion" as part of last year's Fashion Lexicon event, held in September 2021. The official exhibition, which celebrates the diversity of American fashion, will be exhibited in 13 rooms of the American era at the History Museum from 7 May to 5 September.
This Monday, guests are invited to channel the period between 1870 and 1890 and, according to Vogue, "embodied the majesty - and perhaps polarity - of gilded New York."

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