Gwyneth Paltrow Takes the 2026 Actor Awards Stage with One of Her 96-Year-Old Earrings Missing

Gwyneth Paltrow brushed off a wardrobe malfunction during the 2026 Actor Awards

People Gwyneth Paltrow brushes off wardrobe malfunction during 2026 Actor AwardsCredit: Earl Gibson III/Deadline via Getty; VALERIE MACON / AFP via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • The actress appeared on stage with her Marty Supreme cast, but with a part of her ensemble missing — one of her earrings

  • Paltrow arrived at the ceremony wearing Belperron clip-on earrings circa 1930, but took the stage with only one as a part of her look

Gwyneth Paltrowwon't let a wardrobe malfunction ruin her night at the2026 Actor Awards.

The actress, 53, was on hand to representMarty Supremefor its nomination for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture, so when it came time to take the stage with her costars Tyler, the Creator, Timothée Chalamet and Odessa A'zion, she didn't let a sartorial faux pas get in her way.

During the appearance, Paltrow could be seen wearing just one of her Belperron turquoise earrings (circa 1930, per a press release).

Gwyneth Paltrow at the 2026 Actor AwardsCredit: Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty

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Earlier in the night, the complete 96-year-old pair appeared in all of its glory, especially when paired with Paltrow'scleavage-baring back gownthat featured a sheer lace bodice with embellishments continuing into a romantic pleated skirt.

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Her missing earring also made its way back to her ear before the end of the night, as seen in shots of the star toward the end of the show.

Her choice of ensemble was a stark contrast from what she wore to the event back in 2000, which is the last time she attended, when it was called the Screen Actors Guild Awards.

That year, she stepped out in a lilac slip dress that continued the pastel color palette she brought to the previous 1999 SAG Awards, which is when she also took home an accolade for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role forShakespeare in Love.

The 2026 Actor Awards was the first of its kind to have a dress code. In January,Elle, the publication partnering with the ceremony, revealed the"Reimagining Hollywood Glamour from the '20s and '30s" theme, designed to encourage "attendees to reexamine classic ideas of glamour reimagined for a modern red carpet."

The publication called out "sensual gowns, dramatic silhouettes, and fluid, boundary-pushing designs, all inspired by the timeless Art Deco spirit that defined early Hollywood" as some of the predicted looks of the night, which many arriving guests, including Paltrow, delivered. Teyana Taylor certainly pushed boundaries in anudity-inspired Thom Browne gown, while Demi Moore's Schiaparelli gown delivered maximum drama.

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Gwyneth Paltrow Takes the 2026 Actor Awards Stage with One of Her 96-Year-Old Earrings Missing

Gwyneth Paltrow brushed off a wardrobe malfunction during the 2026 Actor Awards NEED TO KNOW The actress appea...
Sarah Paulson Introduces Actor Awards In Memoriam Segment Featuring Her Late Friend Diane Keaton

Sarah Paulson introduced the "In Memoriam" segment at the 2026 Actor Awards on Sunday, March 1

People Sarah Paulson; Diane KeatonCredit: Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty; Rodin Eckenroth/WireImage

NEED TO KNOW

  • Among those honored was Paulson's close friend Diane Keaton, who died on Oct. 11 at age 79

  • The ceremony also paid tribute to other late stars such as Catherine O'Hara, James Van Der Beek and Eric Dane

Sarah Paulsonis paying tribute those we have lost in the past year.

On Sunday, March 1, theAll's Fairactress, 51, introduced the "In Memoriam" segment at the 2026 Actor Awards at the Shrine Auditorium and Expo Hall in Los Angeles.

"Actors make up a family of souls bonded by a challenging pursuit, by valuing our creative spirit and often brought close by our mutual support and affection," Paulsen began. "I am proud to be in the family of actors in this room and all over the world. It is a tremendous privilege to work and to share such rich times with so many gifted people."

"This year, we have lost some true giants — our teachers, our co-workers, our inspirations and our friends," she continued. "All of us have been lifted by them. We are happier, wiser, made just a bit more expansive by their shared spirit, and we must remember how lucky we are to have been changed by them, and we have been."

Among the stars honored at the ceremony wereCatherine O'Hara,James Van Der BeekandEric Dane, as well as Paulson's close friendDiane Keaton.

Diane Keaton; Catherine O'Hara; James Van Der Beek; Eric DaneCredit: Getty (4)

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Keatondiedon Oct. 11 at age 79 followinga bacterial pneumonia infection.

Paulson, 51, previously remembered Keaton at the Los Angeles premiere for her new Hulu seriesAll's Fairback in October. At the time, she toldAccess Hollywoodthat Keaton was "a very dear friend of mine, so it's not something I'm able to talk about yet."

"I'm not able to talk about it. But all I can say, and I have been saying tonight, which is important to me to communicate, is that what you thought she was as a performer, she was even more spectacular as a human being," she said.

Paulson added, "I was the luckiest person in the world to have had her in my life the way that I did." The pair starred alongside each other in the 1999 movieThe Other Sister.Keaton played Paulson's onscreen mother in the film, which led to a decades-long friendship.

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In December, duringThe Hollywood Reporter's Women in Entertainment gala in Los Angeles, Paulson paid tribute to Keaton while appearing on stage alongsideGoldie Hawn. "I want to tell you how much crummier the world is without you in it," Paulson said of Keaton, reciting an email she wished she could send. "I want to tell you how the world lost its mind with grief the day you died."

Diane Keaton and Sarah Paulson at the Hammer Museum's

O'Haradied on Jan. 30at 71, which her rep later confirmed following"a brief illness." In February, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health confirmed theSchitt's Creekalum diedafter suffering from a pulmonary embolism, according to a death certificate. Rectal cancer was listed as the underlying cause of the embolism.

At the 2026 Actor Awards, O'Hara earned a posthumous win for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Comedy Series for her role as Patty Leigh inThe Studio,which the show's star and creatorSeth Rogentearfully accepted on her behalf.

"I obviously have been reflecting on the time I was fortunate enough to spend with her and working with her, and something that I've just been marveling at over the last few weeks was was really her ability to be generous and kind and gracious, while never, ever minimizing her own talents and her own ability to contribute to the work that we were doing," he said in part.

"So I guess I'll just leave you with this," Rogen went on to conclude, "if you have people in your lives that don't know her work, if there are kids in your lives or just people who are out of touch or stupid or something, just show them O'Hara dancing to Harry Belafonte inBeetlejuice. Show them O'Hara hurting her knee inBest in Showand doing that amazing thing where she hobbles around and tells the people, as they are laughing, that that's Catherine O'Hara."

Seth Rogen; Catherine O'HaraCredit: Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty; Mike Coppola/Getty

Van Der Beek, known for his beloved role onDawson's Creek,diedon Feb. 11 at 48, two years after he first revealed his stage 3 colorectal cancer diagnosis in an exclusive interview with PEOPLE in November 2024. His wife,Kimberly Van Der Beek,shared the news of his death via Instagramlast month.

"Our beloved James David Van Der Beek passed peacefully this morning," Kimberly wrote. "He met his final days with courage, faith, and grace. There is much to share regarding his wishes, love for humanity and the sacredness of time. Those days will come. For now we ask for peaceful privacy as we grieve our loving husband, father, son, brother, and friend."

Just 10 months after publicly announcing his diagnosis withamyotrophic lateral sclerosis(ALS), aka Lou Gehrig's disease, Dane diedon Thursday, Feb. 19.

TheGrey's Anatomyactor spent "his final days surrounded by dear friends, his devoted wife [Rebecca Gayheart], and his two beautiful daughters,Billieand Georgia, who were the center of his world," his family said in a statement at the time.

See PEOPLE's full coverageof the 32nd annual Actor Awards Sunday, March 1 as they air live on Netflix.

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Sarah Paulson Introduces Actor Awards In Memoriam Segment Featuring Her Late Friend Diane Keaton

Sarah Paulson introduced the "In Memoriam" segment at the 2026 Actor Awards on Sunday, March 1 NEED T...
As China's economy slows, some young people are snapping up cheap apartments to 'retire' early

The "Life in Venice" housing development, a multibillion-dollar replica of the Italian city on the Chinese coast, stands silent. Many of the tens of thousands of homes are hollow husks of concrete and alabaster.

Associated Press Residents fish in an artificial canal at the semi-abandoned A resident dines on hand-pulled noodle soup at a restaurant in the semi-abandoned Residents play with their children in a playground at the semi-abandoned Stone statues stand over a waterless fountain by a vast, largely empty hotel at the semi-abandoned A shopkeeper cuts sugar cane for juicing at the semi-abandoned

China Cheap Housing Photo Gallery

But in recent years the remote, partially abandoned complex has drawn unlikely new residents like Sasa Chen, a burned-out young Chinese woman who until recently worked a high-earning finance job in Shanghai, China's bustling commerce hub.

The appeal?

Chen pays just 1200 RMB, or $168, a month for her apartment in faux Venice in the eastern Chinese province of Jiangsu. It's so cheap that it's allowed Chen to retire at the tender age of 28.

Experts say Chen is part of a broader trend that has seen a growing number of young people across China migrating to small towns and cities, taking advantage of cheapreal estate pricesthat have been plummeting since the COVID pandemic.

It's a stark reversal from previous generations that prized upward mobility. In decades past, China's ascendent middle class flocked to booming megacities to chase jobs and dreams, once abundantas the country went from rags to riches. But as the once red-hot economy cooled, expectations have soared, opportunities have dwindled and competition has grown fierce.

Most large Chinese companies, especially high-paying tech firms, requires a work schedule of 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. from Monday to Saturday, a grueling lifestyle popularly known as the 996 culture. Under the intense pressure, some young professionals have called it quits altogether and joined a resistance movement called "lying flat" — shunning careers and capitalism for a "low-desire life."

Some are redefining their dreams to focus on rest and relaxation, much like what some young adults in the West are doing under what they call FIRE: "Financial Independence, Retire Early."

That's much more achievable in China because the cost of living in some places can be so low compared to prices in the West.

Home prices at the massive "Life in Venice" development have more than halved since thedownturn in China's property market a few years ago, and a lunch of noodles or a rice dish costs under three dollars in the neighborhood's restaurants.

The bargain prices have benefited young people like Chen willing to live in remote but affordable housing now available across the country. Chen describes it as the perfect life: a sea view, clean air, and cheap rent.

"I have all the time in the world, the freedom of doing whatever I want," said Chen. "I am living the life that I want."

The dream life

"Life in Venice" was envisioned in the early 2010s as a weekend resort for wealthy residents from nearby Shanghai, providing a luxurious yet peaceful life by the sea.

But demand for the vast complex's 46,000 units cratered after China's debt-fueled property market popped. The developer, real estate giantEvergrande, went bankrupt in 2024.

Today the site is a ghost town, with many villas just empty shells. Less than one in five apartments are occupied. Abandoned boats founder off its rundown pier and "For Sale" signs and empty storefronts line its streets. But a smattering of residents have moved in, some of them fishing in the development's tranquil waters.

Chen used to work in a glossy high-rise in Shanghai, making up to 700,000 yuan ($98,480) a year at a large finance firm. But she had never liked the idea of working. After three years, she began plotting her escape from the drudgery of China's white-collar workforce.

Her plan was to save up and find somewhere to live with rent so low she could live off returns on her investments.

Last year, her dream came true: Chen saved 2 million yuan ($290,000) and found a spacious apartment at "Life in Venice". With such low rent, she calculates she can live there for the rest of her life without ever having to work again.

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Though "Life in Venice" doesn't have a branch of her favorite sour soup hotpot restaurant, door to door delivery, or proximity to major hospitals, her new residence has plenty of conveniences like a grocery store and eateries.

Chen used to dread the grind of her nine-to-six job, which she said "felt like marching to my own death." Now, she wakes at 10 a.m. every day, filling her days with cooking, chilling, and long walks on the beach.

"I never believed that work is the meaning of life," Chen said. "My ideal state of life is not to work and stay at places that I like."

Quitting the rat race

Like Chen, scores of young Chinese people have left big cities.

While there's no available data about how many have left the Chinese workforce in recent years, figures show that from 2019 to 2024, Beijing lost 1.6 million people in their twenties and early thirties — around the total population of Philadelphia — according to China's capital statistic office.

"People are quitting this competition, this very clear, linear, upward career track," said Xiang Biao, director of the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology in Germany. "It's a broader trend."

China's economy has cooled in recent years,growing just 5% in 2025— still higher than the U.S. and other rich countries, but a far cry from the double-digit growth the country saw in past decades.

As the economy slows,young Chinese are struggling to find jobs. As of December, 16.5% of 16-24 year-olds who aren't in school were unemployed.

Some, like 29-year-old Ban Zhao, are rejecting the corporaterat racealtogether.

Last summer, Ban moved from a bustling commercial city on China's east coast to a small town in China's southwestern Yunnan province. Tucked away in a lush valley, the town is famed for fresh, clean air and healing hot springs. There, for just 800 yuan a month ($110) Ban rents an apartment with three bedrooms, one of which she converted to a yoga studio.

She and her boyfriend work less than 20 hours a week, offering yoga classes online to make ends meet. The rest of the time, she walks around her scenic neighborhood surrounded by trees and blossoms, often enjoying the region's famed sunshine.

"I can do whatever I want and not do whatever I don't want," Ban said. "I live in heaven."

Apartments cheaper than cars

Some are flocking to places like Hegang, a cold and remote coal mining city in northeastern China famous for shockingly cheap housing prices. As resources dried up and mines closed, young people left, turning Hegang into a city with far more homes than people.

Apartments there are now cheaper than cars, making sales easy for realtor Yang Xuewei.

Yang has sold more than 100 bargain-priced apartments to clients across the country — and even to some foreigners who contacted Yang after watching his online virtual tours. A one-bedroom apartment can be bought for $3,000, and $13,000 can buy a roomy four-bedroom place.

"I don't know about big cities, I never lived in one," Yang said. "I can only say that living in Hegang is easy."

Chen Zhiwu, a University of Hong Kong finance professor, said higher living costs and fewer job opportunities in bigger cities are driving people to move to cheaper places.

"It's natural," Chen said. "Young people are facing reality and thinking hard about their futures."

As China's economy slows, some young people are snapping up cheap apartments to 'retire' early

The "Life in Venice" housing development, a multibillion-dollar replica of the Italian city on the Chinese coas...
Dubai's image as a safe, tax-free haven is rocked by blasts from Iranian airstrikes

TheUnited Arab Emirateshas sold itself to foreigners for years as a sunny, safe, tax-free oasis.

Associated Press A man walks away after watching as a black plume of smoke rises from a warehouse in the industrial area of Sharjah City, United Arab Emirates, Sunday, March 1, 2026, following reports of Iranian strikes in Dubai. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri) ADDS CAUSE OF BLACK SMOKE IN THE BACKGROUND.- A plume of smoke caused by an Iranian strike is seen in the background an an Emirates plane is parked at the Dubai International Airport after its closure in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Sunday, March 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri) A man rides a battery powered scooter on a deserted road in Downtown Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Sunday, March 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri) Passengers stranded by the closure of Dubai International Airport await for assistance in the airport parking lot in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Sunday, March 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri) A black plume of smoke rises from a warehouse at the industrial area of Sharjah City in the United Arab Emirates following reports of Iranian strikes in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Sunday, March 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri)

APTOPIX Emirates Iran US Israel

That peaceful image was shattered Saturday asIranian weaponryrained down on Dubai, setting fire to a five-star resort, threatening the world's tallest building, and killing one person and injuring seven others at the airport in the capital city of Abu Dhabi.

Iranhas hit the UAEand several of its neighbors as it strikes back from themajor attack by U.S. and Israeli forces, causing fear and chaos in a place that until Saturday was predictably calm.

"This is Dubai's ultimate nightmare, as its very essence depended on being a safe oasis in a troubled region," Cinzia Bianco, an expert on the Persian Gulf at the European Council on Foreign Relations wrote on X. "There might be a way to be resilient, but there is no going back."

Officials tried to reassure residents and visitors that the country's air defense system was among the best in the world, blasting down drones and missiles.

"I know it's a scary time for a lot of the residents," Reem Al Hashimy, minister of state for international cooperation, told CNN. "We don't hear these types of loud sounds. But at the same time, those are sounds of interception. And where there has been damage — that has been primarily debris."

Fallout from the attacks has undermined the Emirates' efforts to de-escalate tensions with Iran despite longtime suspicions of its neighbor across the Gulf. The UAE closed its airspace Saturday, shuttered its embassy in Tehran on Sunday, and withdrew its diplomats because of the attacks.

"This decision reflects its firm and unwavering position against any aggression that threatens its security and sovereignty," the Foreign Ministry said in a statement. It called the attacks an "aggressive and provocative approach" that threatens the region.

The oil-rich federation of seven sheikhdoms has relied on its image as a place of serenity to lure wealthy tourists, businesspeople and future residents who want to live largely tax-free in luxury in the desert by the sea. Nearly 90% of the estimated 11 million residents are foreigners.

Real estate firms sell glimmering high-rises and poolside villas to rich Europeans and Americans by promoting a welcoming climate and business-friendly policies, and touting it as one of the safest places on earth.

Hundreds of drone and missile attacks later, though, that reputation has been rocked.

"Last night was pretty surreal," said British racehorse trainer Jamie Osborne, who was in Dubai for the Emirates Super Saturday. "You're standing in the paddock watching missiles get shot through the sky."

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The Ministry of Defense said Sunday that air defenses had dealt with 165 ballistic missiles, two cruise missiles and more than 540 Iranian drones over two days.

While officials said they intercepted all air attacks Saturday, debris from the knocked-down weapons sparked blazes at some of Dubai's most iconic locations.

Social media videos and photos showed a fire outside the Fairmont hotel on the prestigious man-made Palm Jumeirah island, flames licked at the facade of the famous Burj Al Arab hotel, and smoke rose into the sky near Burj Khalifa, the 2,723-foot (830-meter) skyscraper.

There also was a fire at Dubai's Jebel Ali Port, the city's main sea terminal and a major shipping hub, and the Dubai International Airport was damaged and four employees were injured, according to the Dubai Media Office.

Kristy Ellmer, who was on a business trip from New Hampshire, said she was staying away from the windows of her hotel but felt relatively safe despite the numerous blasts.

"You hear a lot of explosions at times, you know, there's hundreds of them," she said. "It's unsettling. We're not used to hearing bombs, right, or missiles."

Louise Herrle, an American tourist whose flight home with her husband from Dubai was scrapped, said it was her third time trying to visit the area. Previous trips were canceled by the COVID-19 pandemic and the Hamas attack on Israel in October 2023.

With their current Abu Dhabi and Dubai tour over, she is less likely to return to the Emirates or the region.

"I would probably be inclined to avoid this part of the world when there's increased tensions, it just explodes so quickly," Herrle said.

Maybe, she said, "the universe was trying to tell us something."

Associated Press journalists Julie Walker in New York and Marc Levy in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, contributed to this report.

Dubai's image as a safe, tax-free haven is rocked by blasts from Iranian airstrikes

TheUnited Arab Emirateshas sold itself to foreigners for years as a sunny, safe, tax-free oasis. APTOPIX Em...

 

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