Kate Beckinsale made a rare outing with her look-alike daughter Lily Mo Sheen over the weekend.
The actress and her 26-year-old doppelganger sat side by side as they watched the Los Angeles Clippers defeat the Los Angeles Lakers at the Intuit Dome on Sunday.
The Underworld star, 52, wore a strapless, belted gray dress with knee-high platform black boots and matching gloves.
She completed her look with a spiked headdress and dangling earrings, and wore her brunette hair in a curly ponytail.
Lily, who Beckinsale welcomed then-boyfriend Michael Sheen in 1999, looked more casual in a white top and black leather jacket.
She let her hair loose and parted it in the middle.
Lilly documented her rare public appearance via her Instagram Stories, sharing close-up shots of players from both California-based teams.
The aspiring actress made headlines last month when her mother shared an outlandish anecdote about Lily’s boyfriend and his repeated claims that he laid her eggs.
“It didn’t come out of his mouth or his ears, it came out the way it would come out of a hen,” Beckinsale claimed on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” Viewers in November. “It contained shell and yolk.”
She said that although she initially thought the claim was an “attention-seeking” stunt, she believed it because Lily’s boyfriend seemed “really scared.”
In any case, the “widowed” alumni were grateful for a “relaxation” while dealing with the spate of deaths of their parents.
Beckinsale’s mother, Judy Law, lost her battle with cancer in July.
At the time, the “Pearl Harbor” star told his Instagram followers, “The world is so dark without her that it’s almost impossible to bear.”
Four months later, she unveiled a tattoo (a reproduction of a full-body sketch) paying tribute to Law, joking that “if everyone would stop dying”, “I wouldn’t have so much ink”.
Ms Law died a year after her husband Roy Battersby passed away at the age of 87.
After her father-in-law passed away in January 2024, Beckinsale posted a memorial video because she “didn’t have the words” to express her grief.
