On her press tour for the Freakier Friday sequel, Lindsay Lohan has turned red carpets into time machines. Infused with nods to her most iconic early-2000s roles, each look is a meticulously crafted homage—whether it’s channeling Barbiecore glamour, twinning with The Parent Trap, or recreating her original Freaky Friday wedding performance gown. Through styling by Andrew Mukamal, Lohan has transformed press appearances into a fashion retrospective of her own legacy.
Barbiecore arrives in Mexico City
At the Latin American premiere in Mexico City, Lohan stunned in a fuchsia silk strapless Balmain gown from its Resort 2026 collection. The dress featured a sweetheart neckline held by gold chain halter straps, with cascading ruffles spilling down the front and a fitted silhouette. Styled with matching heels and bold pink lipstick, the ensemble occupied the center stage of what many dubbed the season’s brightest Barbiecore moment.
Accompanied by Jamie Lee Curtis on a bubblegum-pink carpet, Lohan appeared more polished and radiant than ever—perfectly blending retro vibrancy with red-carpet elegance.
Twinning turned up in New York City
Earlier in her press tour, Lohan appeared on “Good Morning America” and another morning show in a butter-yellow Balmain miniskirt suit paired with a matching headband. The ensemble directly referenced both Annie James and Hallie Parker from The Parent Trap—complete with Hermès handbag and diamond earrings.
Later in the day, she embraced Hallie Parker’s playful side in a floral Roberto Cavalli cheongsam-inspired dress. This pairing of two twin characters felt like fashion as autobiography—decades of memory compressed into color, silhouette, and character gesture.
London honors Freaky Friday legacy in lavender
At the UK premiere in London, Lohan paid final tribute to her character Anna’s original wedding-performance gown. Her modern reinterpretation, a custom creation by Ludovic de Saint Sernin, featured lilac chainmail fabric, Swarovski crystal floral embellishments, and an empire waist halter neckline. The gown echoed the original final scene dress, updated with sparkling detailing.
The outfit was accessorized with a guitar-shaped Judith Leiber clutch—a direct reference to Anna’s band Pink Slip—and finished with nude Manolo Blahnik heel sandals. Styled neutrally to let the gown speak, the ensemble felt both nostalgic and arrestingly fresh.
Nostalgia dressing as storytelling
Taken together, Lohan’s press tour looks operate on multiple narrative levels. They illustrate fashion as memory, using color, silhouette, and accessory cues to bridge fictional characters and public persona. Andrew Mukamal’s role as stylist feels more like that of a costume designer—reframing childhood roles for a present-day spotlight.
Fans and critics alike recognized the method in her approach: each look referenced something meaningful yet allowed Lohan to stand renewed. Whether embracing Barbiecore saturation or choosing couture colored by cinematic past, these outfits turned press events into a curated exhibition of persona-led dressing.