Sharon Stone, 65, is agelessly radiant in gold as she receives Global Citizen Of The Year Award from UN Correspondents Association
Sharon Stone radiated agelessly as she took the stage at the United Nations Awards Gala in New York on Friday.
She was honored that evening with a Global Citizen Of The Year Award from the United Nations Correspondents Association.
The 65-year-old Casino star remained a blonde bombshell, although there were streaks of gray in her sleek, flaxen locks.
For her latest glamorous public appearance, she draped her still enviably petite frame in a shimmering gold dress that fell flatteringly over her curves.
The Basic Instinct star enhanced her features with naturalistic makeup, including nude lipstick, and framed her radiant complexion with an extravagant pair of earrings.
Sharon Stone radiated agelessly as she took the stage at the United Nations Awards Gala in New York on Friday
Her gong was presented to her by António Guterres, Secretary General of the United Nations, who was Prime Minister of Portugal before his current eminence.
Sharon flashed her megawatt smile to the crowd and proudly held up her trophy as António led the crowd in a round of applause for her.
A day before she received her award, cementing her status as a grandee, she gave an interview in which she reflected on her early days in the chaotic world of modeling in the 1970s.
By the age of 15, she had graduated from high school and received a scholarship to study creative writing at Edinboro University of Pennsylvania.
But her plans were derailed after her brother Michael went to jail after being arrested with 2 pounds of cocaine and drug paraphernalia.
Michael had acted, and his associates in the criminal underworld began threatening his family to prevent him from revealing their names.
In her new interview, Sharon said she left town “because my brother was in trouble. He went to Attica. I was 19 when I went to Italy on my own.'
Sharon, who also told her life story in a memoir two years ago, set the tone in her conversation with Artnet: “It was intense because it was the late '70s.”
She was honored that evening with a Global Citizen Of The Year Award from the United Nations Correspondents Association
Her gong was presented to her by António Guterres, Secretary General of the United Nations, who was Prime Minister of Portugal before his current eminence.
The 65-year-old Casino star remained a blonde bombshell, although there were streaks of gray in her sleek, flaxen locks
She recalled, “It was a very wild time being alone as a kid in New York, Italy, Paris and Germany – the whole Studio 54 period.”
The Quick And The Dead star commented: 'Luckily for me, because my brother was already that guy, I was no longer interested. I was the person who went to Studio 54 and just drank Coke and danced the night away.”
She said: 'It was a really fun time, but it was very crazy. Many dangerous things happened. I was able to navigate most of it.”
She acknowledged, “Yet there have certainly been some terrible things that have happened and a number of young girls I worked with have died. There were no guardrails at all. Really young girls walked around unsupervised at that time.'