Eva Amurri and Mom Susan Sarandon Bare Cleavage and Midriffs at SAG Awards

by Aria Brooks

Eva Amurri and Susan Sarandon likely had people saying, "Like mother, like daughter," at the SAG Awards on Saturday evening. Both ladies showed off ample cleava

Eva Amurri and Mom Susan Sarandon Bare Cleavage and Midriffs at SAG Awards

Eva Amurri and Susan Sarandon likely had people saying, “Like mother, like daughter,” at the SAG Awards on Saturday evening. Both ladies showed off ample cleavage and nicely toned midriffs as they walked the red carpet.

Susan Sarandon and Eva Amurri Martino have mother/daughter midriff moment https://t.co/DcqdqJL7MX #sagawards pic.twitter.com/BgUSvt1Sqs

— People Magazine (@people) January 31, 2016

Eva Amurri , 30, wore an Yves Klein dress by Gabriela Cadena in bright blue. It featured wraparound detailing at the bust line and triangle-shaped cutouts throughout her midriff. The dress boasted a thigh-high slit that showed off not only lean, sexy legs, but also some fabulous Casadei heels.

Mom Susan Sarandon–who is still gorgeous and super sexy at 69–chose a Max Mara ensemble consisting of a black bralette topped by a white tuxedo blazer and matching slacks. She accessorized her look with a nude clutch, nude peep-toe shoes, and lots of gold rings. Her blazer was cut low enough to allow her sexy midriff to peek through.

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Fans no doubt loved seeing Eva Amurri attending the SAG Awards with her mother this weekend. In addition to allowing them a glimpse at the gorgeous mother-daughter duo, it likely did their hearts good to see Amurri having fun.

CELEB BLOG: Toddler mealtimes are infuriating – just ask Eva Amurri Martino ( @TheHappilyEva ) https://t.co/1E5nJMKdsv pic.twitter.com/LP2LJrg7mN

— PEOPLE Babies (@PEOPLEbabies) January 26, 2016

It was just this past August that Eva Amurri suffered a miscarriage. She was pregnant with her and hubby Kyle Martino’s second child.

Aria Brooks

Aria Brooks writes about consumer behavior, translating complex ideas into practical insight. They work through editorial reviews backed by user research to make complex topics approachable. They write about both the promise and the cost of transformation, including risks that are easy to overlook. Their perspective is shaped by interviews across engineering, operations, and leadership roles. A recurring theme in their writing is how teams build repeatable systems and measure impact over time. They are known for dissecting tools and strategies that improve execution without adding complexity. They believe good analysis should be specific, testable, and useful to practitioners. They emphasize responsible innovation and the constraints teams face when scaling products or services. They explore how policies, markets, and infrastructure intersect to create second‑order effects. Their coverage includes guidance for teams under resource or time constraints. They value transparent sourcing and prefer primary data when it is available. They pay attention to the organizational incentives that shape outcomes. They focus on what changes decisions, not just what makes headlines.

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