Brooke Shields Supported by Daughter in Rare Family Photo at Documentary Premiere
The actress posed with daughter Grier and husband Chris Henchy at the 'Pretty Baby' New York premiere.
Brooke Shields has her family by her side as she gets ready to release her highly-anticipated new documentary Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields.
As she gears up for the release of the emotional and deeply personal documentary, Shields is being showered with support by her family members, namely husband Chris Henchy and their younger daughter, Grier Hammond Henchy, who both joined her for the New York premiere of Pretty Baby this week.
Shields, 57, looked ravishing at the event, which was held at Alice Tully Hall in Lincoln Center on Wednesday, March 29. The Endless Love star donned a tricolor wrap blazer featuring bright hues of pink, purple and red that draped down to her ankles.
Related: Brooke Shields Has 'Fun in the Sun' With Her Family in New Seaside Snaps
She paired the look with matching pink pumps, while her 16-year-old daughter seemed to play off her mother's color scheme in a monochromatic red suit, accessorized with classic black heels. The teen was actually wearing a piece from her mom's closet, as the vintage Dolce & Gabbana power suit was previously worn by Shields in the '90s sitcom Suddenly Susan.
For his part, Henchy cleaned up in a pair of dark-wash jeans and a tan blazer over a blue collared shirt. The pair's firstborn daughter, 19-year-old Rowan Francis, did not appear to be in attendance at the event.
While Shields seems to have no shortage of support about the upcoming doc, she previously admitted that her daughters were "mad" after first watching it, as they weren't previously made aware of all the content that would be discussed in the film, which includes Shields' experience as a young girl in the spotlight and the exploitation and sexualization that came with her rise to fame.
"There's a lot in the documentary they did not know about which I got in trouble with them for," the Blue Lagoon star admitted to PEOPLE earlier this month.
"They were mad that I didn't inform them about everything," she said. "But needless to say, it opened up some other conversations."
"So these kinds of conversations are really important to have for our young women," she also stated in the interview, "because we need to be honest about what we're facing and how to find our own agency. And we need these young women to find their own agency as early as possible."
Directed by Emmy winner Lana Wilson, the two-part documentary is expected to hit Hulu on Monday, Apr. 3.
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