Pregnant Anne Hathaway Stuns in Red as She Shows Baby Bump in New Photo

Anne Hathaway is showing off her pregnancy street style.
Hathaway, 43, was all smiles as she arrived for The Odyssey press junket in New York City on Tuesday, June 30, with her growing stomach on full display.
The actress stunned in a red look, completing her outfit with red heels and a pair of sunglasses, alongside gold jewelry.
Hathaway’s outing comes days after she revealed she is pregnant with her and husband Adam Shulman‘s third baby. In an Instagram video, Hathaway showed off her baby bump.
Related: Barbra Streisand Cradles Pregnant Anne Hathaway's Baby Bump: 'Mazel Tov'
Barbra Streisand made a rare appearance to bless Anne Hathaway’s newly announced pregnancy. “To Anne & Adam, Congratulations on your pregnancy!” Streisand, 84, wrote via Instagram on Friday, June 19, referring to Hathaway, 43, and her husband, Adam Shulman. “Mazel tov, Barbra xo.” Streisand also uploaded a sweet photo of the two women posing for […]“x Baby I’m yours x,” she wrote.
Hathaway became a mom in 2016, when she and Schulman welcomed son Jonathan. The couple, who tied the knot in 2012, added son Jack to their family in 2019.
In 2024, the actress previously opened up about suffering a miscarriage nearly 10 years earlier while she acted in the play Grounded, in which her character was pregnant.
“The first time it didn’t work out for me. … So when it did go well for me, having been on the other side of it — where you have to have the grace to be happy for someone — I wanted to let my sisters know, ‘You don’t have to always be graceful. I see you and I’ve been you,'” she recalled.
Related: Anne Hathaway Had a Miscarriage While Playing a Pregnant Character
Anne Hathaway says she experienced pregnancy loss before welcoming children with husband Adam Shulman. Hathaway, 41, was asked about her second pregnancy announcement during a new interview with Vanity Fair, which was published on Monday, March 25. The actress elaborated on the section in the 2019 Instagram post that addressed women who are struggling with […]Hathaway continued, “It’s really hard to want something so much and to wonder if you’re doing something wrong.”
Through the years, Hathaway has been candid about raising her children.
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Deal of the Day
Deal Alert! This 44%-Off Throw-On Mini Dress Is Too Good to Leave in Your Cart View Deal“I love that being a boy mom has really informed my fashion,” Hathaway told People in an April interview. “I have to always be able to go from a serious business meeting to, like, a basketball court. You have to be able to play pickup basketball at any point, in any outfit. So [I tell myself]: When you get dressed in the morning, dress wisely because you 100 percent are going to have a projectile thrown at you probably by the end of breakfast.”
She continued, “Did you ever see the video about boy moms versus girl moms? Oh my gosh. It’s so funny. It’s like girl moms sit and they’re coloring with their daughter and they’re like, ‘What a beautiful piece of art?’ And it’s, like, so quiet. Boy moms, they’re like, ‘Where’s your weapons’ basket?’”
Hathaway shared that she feels “very lucky,” adding, “I know that not everybody who wants to be a parent gets to be. I’m just blown away by how fortunate I am. It went really well for me twice, and that’s really lucky.”
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Soccer fans sent a message to Washington on Iran — deal or no deal
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Skip to main content OpinionSoccer fans sent a message to Washington on Iran — deal or no deal
By Lisa Daftari Published June 30, 2026, 6:33 p.m. ETSee more of our coverage in your search results.
Add The California Post on GoogleTwo games were being played at Los Angeles Stadium on June 15. The first was the Islamic Republic’s World Cup match against New Zealand, its first of the tournament. The second was being played outside, where the Iranian American community organized a large anti-regime demonstration.
Many in the diaspora were not there to watch soccer. They had come to confront the regime on the only piece of American soil where they could, and to send a message to Washington.
The Memorandum of Understanding may have been signed with Iran, but the Iranian people have not signed onto it.

The protesters carried signs that said “42,000.” That is the number of Iranians reportedly killed by the Islamic Republic in January, documented by human rights organizations. They passed out T-shirts with the faces of the young men and women rounded up during the January uprisings, tried in revolutionary courts behind closed doors and executed.
I have covered this community for more than two decades. This was not protest theater. They were there to make a policy statement the only way the diaspora can.
The crowd chanted for King Reza Pahlavi. They chanted death to the Islamic Republic. They chanted “terrorist” at the regime’s representatives walking into the stadium. They flew the pre-revolutionary Lion and Sun flag the regime calls illegitimate. FIFA, at the regime’s request, had tried to ban it inside the stadium.
Iranian American advocacy organizations appealed through FIFA’s own process and lost. They went to federal court seeking a restraining order and lost again. The diaspora was told, in effect, that on US soil during an American-hosted tournament, the symbolic preferences of the Islamic Republic outweighed the First Amendment rights of Iranian Americans.
They came anyway. They brought the flags anyway. Tehran was watching. So was Washington.

Every previous US administration has negotiated with the regime while ignoring the needs, human rights and security of the Iranian people. The diaspora was telling the Trump administration not to make the same mistake.
The Iranian people are not a challenge or an afterthought. They are a constituency. And they have been a reliable anti-regime force and American ally against a terrorist government for 47 years.
The MOU is a framework, not a final deal. There is still time. The Iranian American community is asking President Donald Trump to remember who built his political leverage going into Operation Epic Fury and beyond. The policy of “maximum pressure” worked because the Iranian people made it work from the inside. The protests of 2009, 2017, 2019, 2022 and January 2026 are the reason why this regime came to the table at all.
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Yet every time the regime came close to collapse, an outside power threw it a lifeline. The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action was one such lifeline. The diaspora outside the stadium is telling the administration not to make the MOU the next lifeline.
President Trump may be willing to look past the transgressions of the regime in pursuit of a deal. The Iranian people are not. They are not going to forgive a system that executed their children. And they are not going to accept a peace negotiated in their name but signed without their consent.
A few things should follow from what Washington heard outside LA’s stadium.
President Trump has an opportunity here that no recent president has had. The regime is weaker than it has been since 1979. The Iranian American community is the most informed, pro-democracy advocacy bloc on this question in the country. They are asking for a policy that does not reward the regime they fled.
The Iranian people have lived under this regime for 47 years. They have buried its victims. They have watched every Western government that ever tried to negotiate with it repeat the same mistakes, convinced the next round would be different, and they have watched the regime pocket every concession and come back for more.
The diaspora outside the stadium was telling the world what it has been telling Washington for a generation. This regime was not built to compromise. It was not built to play nice. It does not deserve the deal it is being offered.
Washington should listen to the Iranian people, because they have earned the right to be heard.
Lisa Daftari is a foreign policy analyst and media commentator based in Los Angeles.
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Republicans to hold their first-ever midterm convention in Dallas, Trump announces

President Donald Trump announced Tuesday that Republicans will hold a party convention in Dallas in September, noting in a Truth Social post that the event will be the first of its kind for the GOP in a midterm election year.
Trump described the convention, scheduled for Sept. 9-10, as a “truly Historic Event.”
“Dallas will take center stage on September 9th and 10th as we celebrate our Nation, our achievements, and our bright future. THE GOLDEN AGE OF AMERICA HAS ONLY JUST BEGUN!” Trump said in his post.
The party gathering comes as Republicans are defending narrow majorities in the House and Senate, and as the president’s sinking approval rating has put those majorities at risk.
Texas will be at the center of this year’s fight for control of Congress, with multiple House battlegrounds and competitive races for Senate, and potentially for governor. A New York Times/Siena poll released Tuesday found a tied Senate race between Democratic state Rep. James Talarico and his Republican opponent, state Attorney General Ken Paxton, while Gov. Greg Abbott holds a six-point lead over Democratic state Rep. Gina Hinojosa in the governor’s race.
Trump on Tuesday offered a preview of the potential programming, writing on Truth Social: “At the Event, we will have hardworking Americans, our Great Innovators, Entrepreneurs, Manufacturers, First Responders, and Job Creators who are powering our Nation’s Golden Age, and proving that America’s best days are still ahead of us. We will also have lots of Great Entertainment — It will be a RALLY like none other!”
Trump announced plans for a midterm convention late last year. Democrats are not planning to hold a similar event.
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Bridget BowmanBridget Bowman is a national political reporter for NBC News.
Tara Prindiville contributed.