Olivia Wilde shares a glimpse of her toned abs while shopping at a flea market in Los Angeles
Olivia Wilde kept it very casual as she went shopping in Los Angeles on Saturday.
The 39-year-old actress looked very different from her stunning performance at Monday’s Met Gala in New York.
Wearing a white T-shirt and distressed straight-leg jeans, the Don’t Worry Darling actress and director showed a glimpse of her toned abs as she made her way through a flea market in the Silver Lake area.
The Independent Spirit Award winner left her long blonde hair in loose layers and topped it off with a beige knitted toque.
She appeared to wear little makeup and showed off her natural beauty.
Casual: Olivia Wilde kept it very casual as she went shopping in Los Angeles on Saturday. Wearing a white T-shirt and distressed straight leg jeans, the actress and director, 39, offered a glimpse of her toned abs
Booksmart: The director of Booksmart was spotted rummaging through stacks of books at one of the flea market stalls in the Silverlake area
She wore white sneakers for comfort and dark sunglasses to shield her eyes from the glare.
While browsing the stalls, Olivia picked up a beautiful bunch of flowers.
She looked at several stacks of books and walked away with a few purchases in her 1,000 books before entering kindergarten.
The single mother who shares her children Otis, nine, and Daisy, six, with former fiancé Jason Sudeikis, 47, enjoyed a hot drink while carrying her purchases.
The former couple may have gone their separate ways, but are united in their efforts to get a lawsuit filed by their former nanny moved to private arbitration.
Their former janitor, Erica Genaro, sued them for wrongful termination.
She claims she was fired after applying for a three-day “stress leave” in 2021 over tensions surrounding their crumbling relationship.
Page six reported that the couple claimed the lawsuit was falsely filed in California when it should have been filed in New York.
Olivia and the Ted Lasso star issued a joint statement Thursday saying, “It’s unfortunate that this private matter is still playing out in the press.
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“Our focus was and will remain to steadfastly protect our family from harassment of any kind,” they wrote.
“We are confident that the evidence presented will support our position to dismiss this case summarily and bring peace to our family.”
Olivia, who has been preparing for her next directing job with Perfect, based on gymnast Kerri Strug’s historic comeback to win gold at the 1996 Olympics, has spoken out strongly for high profile Hollywood writers.
“Writers channel the human condition into content that brings us together, teaches us things, and makes us feel things.
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Natural beauty: The Independent Spirit Award winner left her long blonde hair in loose layers and topped it off with a beige knit toque. Olivia appeared to wear little make-up, showing off her natural beauty
Comfort: She wore white sneakers for comfort and dark sunglasses to shield her eyes from the glare
Flowers: While sniffing between the stalls, Oliva picked up a beautiful bunch of flowers
Arbitration: Olivia and her ex-fiance Jason Sudeikis, 47, have asked a judge to allow a wrongful termination lawsuit brought by their former nanny to be moved to private arbitration to settle the case
Film prep: Olivia is preparing for her next directing job. Perfect is based on gymnast Kerri Strug’s historic comeback to win gold at the 1996 Olympics
Writers’ strike: The actress, producer and director is a strong supporter of the writers’ strike that began on Tuesday in Los Angeles and New York. “I stand in solidarity with the WGA,” she wrote on Instagram, “and hope the producers make the decision to end this soon.”
“Pushing them into poverty and replacing them with robots is utterly dystopian,” she wrote Tuesday, the first day of the work stoppage.
Collective worker power through unions is the only way to curb corporate voracious appetites, she argued.
“They are designed to grow at the expense of everything else starving around them. Even if their CEOs disagree, that’s what they owe their shareholders. Or if they’re privately owned, that’s how they compete.”
The actress, director and producer completed the statement by writing, “I stand in solidarity with the WGA and hope the producers make the decision to end this soon.”