Allison Williams has been hard at work on the chat show circuit to promote her latest project, and it’s safe to say the outfits have been showstopping.
Her latest appearance on Late Night with Seth Meyers was no exception. The 34-year-old Get Out star donned a classic LBD, complete with plunging sweetheart neckline. She teamed the look with black court shoes, keeping the ensemble effortlessly elegant.
MORE: Lily Collins shares exclusive backstage video of the Emily In Paris costume wardrobe
RELATED: Sarah Jessica Parker brings back Carrie Bradshaw's iconic Fendi Baguette for And Just Like That
The actress donned a classic LBD for the occasion
The movie, M3gan, which made an impressive $30M over the weekend, is the story of an artificially intelligent lifelike doll that's programmed to be a child's greatest companion.
Allison being interviewed on Late Night with Seth Meyers
Designed by brilliant roboticist Gemma (played by Allison) M3GAN can listen, watch and learn as it plays the role of friend and teacher, playmate and protector. But like any good sci-fi thriller, the results of playing with M3gan take a Black-Mirroresque turn. (We won’t give away any more plot spoilers, don’t worry.)
The actress provided a masterclass in monochrome
The same day the actress wore an entirely white ensemble and Stella McCartney blouse, proving that you simply can’t go wrong with the classics. Allison’s appearance comes after her recent comments on the ‘Nepo Baby’ debate which has been dominating Hollywood’s agenda recently. Allison is the daughter of veteran NBC journalist Brian Williams, who she admitted helped her land her first big acting gig when she was cast in the HBO hit series Girls back in 2012.
MORE: How to organise your makeup for a New Year's reset
RELATED: Nicola Peltz rocks the ultimate birthday celebration outfit
"All that people are looking for is an acknowledgment that it’s not a level playing field,” she told Vulture Magazine, “It’s just unfair. Period, end of the story, and no one’s really working that hard to make it fair. To not acknowledge that me getting started as an actress versus someone with zero connections isn’t the same — it’s ludicrous."
She then went on to say, “It doesn’t take anything away from the work that I’ve done. It just means that it’s not as fun to root for me.”
Like this story? Sign up to our Hello! Fashion newsletter to get your weekly 'Fashion Fix' delivered straight to your inbox.