Belén Rueda's Guggenheim dress and other spectacular looks that deserve a Goya award

A magenta carpet that celebrates a movie night and where all the guests have come together to praise the great talent and good harvest of this last year.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
10 February 2024 Saturday 04:03
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Belén Rueda's Guggenheim dress and other spectacular looks that deserve a Goya award

A magenta carpet that celebrates a movie night and where all the guests have come together to praise the great talent and good harvest of this last year. In the hours before the ceremony of the 38th edition of the Goya Awards, the main protagonists have left a record of fashion trends and how to dress to emerge gracefully from a red carpet.

Cristina Castaño, one of the first to appear on the red carpet, with a dress that combined two of the great trends that have been seen on the red carpet of this edition: glitter and transparencies. A green design signed by designer Zuhair Murad, which featured a plunging neckline, accentuated shoulder pads and a long cape that added greater theatricality to a haute couture design. The actress accompanied it with a Christian Louboutin bag, Bulgari jewelry and René Caovilla shoes.

Blanca Romero has been another of the great surprises of the night. After her time on 'MasterChef Celebrity' and about to release the film 'The Abbess', the actress walked the Goya carpet in a satin red dress by Isabel Sanchís. A design with an original neckline with dropped shoulders and a bow shape, which she followed with a gathered waist and a long, voluminous skirt. The Asturian has suffered a small setback upon her arrival at the Valladolid hotel with the footwear and has made an appeal through her social networks to ask her followers for help and get another model.

As usual, Belén Rueda has not disappointed with the choice of her dress, with an impressive design inspired by the Guggenheim Museum in New York, which was initially designed in red by Frank Lloyd Wright, a precursor of organic architecture. A suit with a Spanish seal signed by Valenzuela Atelier, one of Rueda's recurring brands, with a sweetheart neckline and fitted silhouette. The coat-cape of architectural lines refers to the shapes of the Guggenheim and that Old Hollywood aesthetic that so characterizes the performer. In addition, the color red has been one of the big trends of 2023 and, as can be seen, it is still very present at the beginning of the year with other outfits such as that of the nominee for best leading actress for 'Let Nobody Sleep', Malena Alterio , Inma Cuesta or Natalia Sánchez.

Ana Belén, presenter of the gala and one of the most anticipated women of the night, was one of the most elegant and assertive of the ceremony. With her innate poise and elegance, she arrived on the carpet in a strapless dress and voluminous maxi skirt custom made by Redondo Brand. A suit made of ice-colored wild silk with a bodice framed with draped petals and hand embroidery that she combined with Damiani jewelry and Lodi shoes. And like a good master of ceremonies, she wanted to go one step further and demanded a ceasefire in Gaza with a message in the palm of her hand.

Ana Rujas, great winner for her role in 'Cardo' or 'La mesías', caused a sensation with a black and red strapless dress, with a fifties aesthetic, signed by Armani Privé. The actress who has just made the leap to cinema and will produce her own films completed her styling with Bulgari jewelry.

The journalist and president of the Academy of Performing Arts of Spain Cayetana Guillén Cuervo was one of the most original of the night with a unique design by Isabel Sanchís. A semi-transparent suit from the spring/summer 2024 collection with a metallic appearance structure made of horse hair that simulates a floral landscape.

Penélope Cruz was one of the last to appear on the red carpet and she did so accompanied by her great friend, the director Pedro Almodóvar. She did it dressed by her leading brand, Chanel, of which she has been an ambassador for many years. A floral design from the fall/winter 2024 haute couture collection, which featured hundreds of flowers embroidered with sequins in black, pink and blue tones, with a black tulle overskirt. A design that took around a total of 1,260 hours of work, with more than 367,000 embroidered elements.

Macarena Gómez has followed one of the most recurring trends on red carpets: transparencies. A black lace dress by Marciano by Guess and Guess sandals.