The Loot Shopping Guide: Maya Rudolph Is TV's Most Flamboyant Billionaire
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Could Maya Rudolph be television's new sartorial Villanelle? Or more specifically, the character she has reprised on Loot? The comedy, which premiered in the summer of 2022 and is now in the middle of its second season on Apple TV+, stars Rudolph as Molly Wells, a woman who comes into an $87 billion settlement after she divorces her unfaithful tech entrepreneur husband (Severance's Adam Scott). When she gets a call from the director of the philanthropic foundation she didn't even know she had, Molly is soon inspired to channel her vast resources—and too much idle time—into doing some good.
Cue the gaffes of 0.001 percenter delusion. A light satire more Schitt's Creek than Succession, Loot relishes in its irreverent portrayal of stratospheric wealth and privilege. To recap a few highlights from season 1: Molly gets a mega-yacht for her birthday and notes one of its giant indoor pools would be cute for her dogs (who are named Mary-Kate and Ashley); the real David Chang is her personal chef, whose job is to microwave her burritos; Lamborghinis in every color of the rainbow line the driveway of her palatial Bel-Air mansion, which happens to be the real 105,000-square-foot, $126 million behemoth called The One. By season 2, she has downsized into what she calls a "beach cabana," which looks like an Aman resort complete with five pools, a koi pond, hydroponic herb walls, and airbeds filled with chamomile tea. Chang is still her chef, except now he is locked away in a hidden kitchen. You get the idea.
Choux Dress Orange Gerber in Popeline Cotton
Cape-Effect Ruffled Crepe Dress
Dahlia Sandals
Bella Dress
Visconti Dress
Mrs. Ross Fringed Crepe Kaftan
Choux Dress Orange Gerber in Popeline Cotton
Choux Dress
High Boots Stretch
Tasseled Gown
Oaklane Trench Coat in Admiral Crepe
x Netflix Elizabeth Metallic Striped Gown
Resilient Shirt Dress
Arizona Big Buckle Shearling Slide Sandals
Lila Printed Silk-Satin Pajama Set
The Falconetti Ruffled Metallic Silk-Blend Dress
Ryan Floral Silk Wide Leg Pants
Kennedy Floral-Print Feather-Trim Blouse
Portrait Collar Necklace
Party Checked Pajama Set
Silk Dalel Ttop
Garance cutout-back puffed-sleeve dress
Bella Dress
Mrs. Ross Fringed Crepe Kaftan
Choux Dress
Oaklane Trench Coat in Admiral Crepe
The Falconetti Dress
Portrait Collar Necklace
Then there is Molly's wardrobe. "Maya is so willing to have fun with fashion. She's just game," says Loot costume designer Kirston Mann, for whom this is her seventh collaboration with the actress. "She will take risks that not everybody would be willing to do." Note: the large collection of exuberant, multicolored head-to-toe La DoubleJ outfits her character favors.
That Molly is a nouveau riche denizen of the West Coast made crafting her sartorial identity all the more interesting. First, she had to look distinctly L.A. rich. "I'd say New Yorkers are a little more European and Angelenos gear a little more Japanese and so we were able to have a lot of fun with color and pattern. If this was Manhattan we would have been more subdued," Mann says. "We wanted to make Molly a woman of this time and of this place—and new money, which is a little more wild."
Yet as delightful as it is to watch Molly uninhibitedly peacock around in feathers, silks, prints, and designer labels, Loot strives to be as much an earnest tale of redemption and self-discovery as it is a buoyant candy-colored parody. As Molly slowly drifts down to earth, so does her wardrobe—to a certain extent.
"We definitely have that arc going," Mann says. For her first day of "work" last season, Molly showed up in the same pink satin suit Beyoncé wore in her "Apeshit" music video with Jay-Z. By mid-season, her daytime attire had better adapted to her professional environment, with printed midi dresses by the likes of Rodarte, Erdem, Zimmermann, and Sandro. "As she actually begins to fit into the place, we try to show that in many ways but definitely in her clothing," Mann says. Which is not to say that Molly has lost her spark: In the premiere of season 2, when asked about her current style vibe, Molly deadpans: "Tibetan monk chic."
"We're still going to have fun," Mann says. "I feel like we found a unique vision for Molly that combines Maya's style with uber-wealth."
Could Maya Rudolph be television's new sartorial Villanelle? Or more specifically, the character she has brought to life this summer on Loot? The comedy, which is currently airing on Apple TV+, stars Rudolph as Molly Novak, a woman who comes into an $87 billion settlement after divorcing her adulterous entrepreneur husband (Severence's Adam Scott). After finding out about the philanthropic foundation she didn't know she had, Molly is inspired to channel her vast resources—and too much idle time—into something that is productive, fulfilling, and, most importantly, makes for good PR. Cue the inevitable but charmingly rendered instances of 0.001 percenter delusion, reminiscent of our beloved Rose family of Schitt's Creek.
Loot relishes in its playful portrayal of uber-wealth and privilege. Molly has an army of uniformed staff to , David Chang is her personal chef, Lamborghinis in every color of the rainbow line the driveway of her ultra-modern .
playful one percenter satire that relishes portraying the one percenter lifestyle iwth fun, irreverence, and a really great wardrobe. oand decides to enter the workplace by way of the philanthropic foundation she didn't know she even had.
While pig masks and Jesus costumes don't figure into Molly's wardrobe,
vbuoyant, ultimately feel-good story about identity, kindness, very much in the vein of Schitt's Creek in its buoyancy and ultimately feel-good, heartfelt motives.
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