Huddersfield Daily Examiner

EMMA JOHNSON

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There was no red carpet and the stars were sitting at home rather than getting drunk and being vilified by Ricky Gervais, but what a joy it was to see A-listers all dressed up in glamorous gowns and suits for the Golden Globes at the weekend.

And the women really went for it when it came to the outfits. Actually so did the men – and I’m looking forward to seeing how they step up for the Oscars next month, whatever form the ceremony eventually takes.

Rosamund Pike was my look of the night. Her hot pink tulle concoction from British designer Molly Goddard, teamed with black Alexander McQueen combat boots, was a scene-stealing affair. Utterly over-the-top, it was exactly the kind of dress you want to see in the depths of a global pandemic.

A dress that reminds us that we can still have fun, that things will get better. If I could afford it, that would be my firstnight-out-of-lockdown dress right there. No need to worry about people getting too close.

I do wonder, given its proportion­s, whether Rosamund, who won a Golden Globe for her performanc­e in dark comedy I Care a Lot, would have worn it had she been attending the ceremony in person.

However, that her avant garde look was almost universall­y praised across the media spectrum filled me with joy about how far we have come when it comes to discussing women’s fashion choices.

As someone who has herself been guilty in the past of saying unkind things about celebritie­s’ outfits – in the dark days when ‘worst-dressed lists’, ‘nip-slips’

Nicola Coughlan in her Golden Globes dress Picture: and cellulite shots were par for the course in magazines and newspapers – it gladdened my heart that we are all realising that taking down a woman over her clothes, hair or body shape is no longer acceptable.

Or so I thought. Like Rosamund Pike, Derry Girls and Bridgerton star Nicola Coughlan chose a dress by Molly Goddard for her virtual Globes look – a gorgeous lemon sherbert design, which she accessoris­ed with a small black cardigan.

But not everyone was a fan. An American podcaster – whose name I won’t print because I had not heard of her before and think she has had quite enough mileage out of this – took to Twitter to say: “The fat girl from Bridgerton is wearing a black cardigan at the Golden Globes, bc no matter how hot and stylish you are, if you’re a fat girl there will always be a black cardigan you think about wearing, then decide against, but ultimately wear bc you feel like you have to.”

I am not sure where to start with how rude and unnecessar­y, if not downright cruel, that statement was.

Nicola herself had no trouble addressing it. The Galway-born actress took to social media to clap back: “I thought the cardigan looked ace, Molly Goddard used them on her runway with the dresses that’s where the idea came from...

“Also I have a name.”

If ever a mic drop emoji was appropriat­e surely that was it.

But, Nicola, who has form for calling out bodyshamer­s – she tackled a theatre critic who referred to her as ‘overweight’ in a 2018 review of her performanc­e in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie at the Donmar Theatre – was not done.

In a string of follow-up tweets she went on to say that “Every time I’m asked about my body in an interview it makes me deeply uncomforta­ble and so sad I’m not just allowed to just talk about the job I do that I so love” calling it “reductive to women”.

Funny, fabulous and fierce. I think we will be hearing from Nicola long after keyboard warriors have run out of things to say.

Rosamund Pike

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