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Meryl Streep takes Prada sequel promo from green spots to glossy red in New York

By Brandon Hayes Apr 20, 2026

took The Devil Wears Prada 2 through two different color and texture lanes on Friday in New York, first stepping out in an oversized green spotted satin layer and later changing into a glossy red trench for the film’s global press junket in the Financial District.

The first look was a bright green satin topper scattered with oversized black spots, cut with a broad collar, dropped shoulders and a roomy shape. Streep, 75, wore it over a white collared shirt and medium-wash jeans, with turned-back cuffs that showed a darker reverse side with green spots over black. Black sunglasses, small gold hoops, black slip-ons and a slate-blue top-handle bag finished the outfit.

For the later appearance, she switched to a long red patent Dolce & Gabbana trench over a dress. The coat had broad peaked lapels, a double-breasted front, a tied waist and an ankle-grazing hem, while only a narrow strip of the dress showed at the neckline, where a red print broke up the patent surface. She added a brighter red top-handle bag, pointed red Dolce & Gabbana pumps, Emmanuelle Khanh sunglasses and Effy Jewelry. styled the look.

The two Friday appearances fit a promo run that has kept circling red. Streep opened the tour at the end of March in Mexico City in a monochrome red Dolce & Gabbana suit with glossy slingbacks, then worked red back into the Tokyo premiere through ’s Métiers d’Art 2026 collection. The New York outing extended that thread as the film’s publicity moves from city to city, with joining Streep at the Seoul premiere in Balenciaga and Celine and the pair later arriving in Tokyo for another stop on the rollout.

The contrast between the green layer and the red trench did more than give the day some range. It underlined how the film’s fashion messaging has settled on a single visual idea and kept returning to it, even as the pieces and cities change. For a sequel built on clothes as identity, that consistency is the point.

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