Sarah Paulson, 51, cozies up to Warren Beatty and Annette Bening's daughter, 25, at Tonys... but there's no sign of long-term partner Holland Taylor, 83

Jun 08, 2026 - 07:07
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Sarah Paulson, 51, cozies up to Warren Beatty and Annette Bening's daughter, 25, at Tonys... but there's no sign of long-term partner Holland Taylor, 83

Sarah Paulson put on an unexpectedly cozy display with her on-stage costar Ella Beatty at Sunday's 79th Annual Tony Awards in New York City.

The 51-year-old actress – who recently struck up a friendship with her All's Fair costar Kim Kardashian – was pictured holding hands with the 25-year-old daughter of Warren Beatty and Annette Bening on the red carpet at the iconic Radio City Music Hall.

Notably, Paulson didn't appear to be accompanied by her long-term partner, 83-year-old actress Holland Taylor.

Paulson and her nepo baby co-star beamed widely on the red carpet and Beatty even appeared to whisper something in Paulson's ear while breaking out in a grin.

While there were numerous stars walking the red carpet in tasteful, eye-catching ensembles, Paulson's look was one of the evening's bigger misses.

She was dressed in a bizarre white-and-pink frock featuring a plunging neckline that highlighted her cleavage.

Sarah Paulson put on an unexpectedly cozy with her on-stage co-star Ella Beatty at Sunday's 79th Annual Tony Awards in New York City

The 51-year-old actress  was pictured holding hands with the 25-year-old daughter of Warren Beatty and Annette Bening on the red carpet at the iconic Radio City Music Hall. At another moment, Beatty grinned as she appeared to whisper something to Paulson

Notably, Paulson didn't appear to be accompanied by her long-term partner, 83-year-old actress Holland Taylor (R); seen at their most recent red carpet appearance at the 2026 Vanity Fair Oscar Party on May 15 in LA

Paulson's dress also had dramatic oversize ties on her shoulders that flopped down to her arms, along with accented red satin bows that hung limply from her waist.

The busy outfit got even more crowded thanks to floral embellishments all over the bodice and shimmering pink skirt, which took on a wrinkled appearance. 

Paulson contrasted her high-volume ensemble with a chic dark bob with long bangs that were parted to expose her forehead.

She added some extra flair to an already over-the-top look with a set of dangling feather-like silver earrings that complemented her rhinestone-covered open-toe heels.

Her pal Beatty opted for a far more reserved and modest white gown with full sleeves and a long skirt.

It added a playful touch with a circular cutout over one hip that revealed what looked like a large golden buckle with a string belted around her midriff.

Unlike Paulson, Beatty favored long, pin-straight locks that cascaded down her shoulders.

In a conversation for Interview magazine that was published on June 5, Paulson delved into how she and Beatty became friends and colleagues after her Broadway costar Elle Fanning had to depart their production of Appropriate to star with Timothée Chalamet in the Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown.

Paulson was among the worst dressed stars at the Tonys. She wore a bizarre white-and-pink frock featuring a plunging neckline that highlighted her cleavage. It had floppy bows on her shoulders and hips, along with floral embellishments throughout

Her pal Beatty opted for a far more reserved and modest white gown with full sleeves and a long skirt, along with a cutout over one hip revealing a large golden buckle and a string belted around her waist

Paulson shared that she and the play's creative team brought in multiple new actresses to read for Fanning's part, but it was Beatty who immediately knocked them off their feet.

'We read with several actresses and you came in and when you walked out, [costar] Michael [Esper] and I turned to each other and we’re like, “It’s got to be Ella Beatty,"' Paulson recounted.

'It’s so funny to think about that because it’s hard for me to not associate you as a person I’m wildly close to and try to remember what I felt when I first met you,' Paulson continued. 'The thing that comes to mind most clearly is self-possessed.'

The American Horror Story mainstay then claimed that she had 'no idea' that Beatty was the daughter of Warren Beatty, 89, and Annette Bening, 68, as Ella had a relatively low profile at the time.

'Your father was a great movie star, but in terms of the current knowledge that some young people have today, your name might not be synonymous immediately with one of the most important actors and directors to ever walk the planet,' Paulson added.

The television star has been in a relationship with the stage and screen icon Holland Taylor – who is 32 years her senior – since 2015.

The couple were last pictured together back in March, when they attended the Vanity Fair Oscar Party.

In December of last year, Taylor put on a loving display with her partner as they held hands and sat next to each other at the unveiling of Paulson's star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Back in December, Paulson was seen holding hands and looking affectionate with partner Holland Taylor. Taylor serenaded her on stage as Paulson's star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame was unveiled

Paulson, who spoke in Interview about becoming friends with Beatty after she took over for departing Appropriate co-star Elle Fanning, claimed not to have known she was the daughter of Warren Beatty (center) and Annette Bening (L) before suggesting her for the job; pictured in 2016 in Hollywood

Paulson, who won a Tony Award in 2024 for starring in Appropriate, was spotted looking similarly cozy with Beatty last month when they were pictured out in Manhattan the Met Gala; pictured May 2 in NYC

Paulson made a divisive appearance on the Met Gala red carpet in a gray tulle dress with dollar-bill glasses; pictured May 4

Taylor, who called Paulson a 'shining star,' said that, as an actress, she 'is first of all a wild creature in the animal kingdom. Warm blooded, instinctive, mysterious.'

'And Sarah is dangerous — trust me in this — not dangerous like a snake, more like a mongoose,' Taylor continued, via Harper's Bazaar. 'You know, those darling furry, little creatures that kill snakes.'

Taylor also praised Paulson's abilities as an actress, calling her talent 'as honest as our faith and as complicated as chemistry.'

Paulson, who won a Tony Award in 2024 for starring in Appropriate, was spotted looking similarly cozy with Beatty last month when they were pictured out in Manhattan before Sarah made a divisive appearance on the red carpet at the Met Gala.

The Tony Awards proved to be a nail-biting competition Sunday, with stars of both stage and screen vying for Broadway honors at Radio City Music Hall.

Daniel Radcliffe, Rose Byrne, Nathan Lane, Laurie Metcalf, Stephanie Hsu, Carrie Coon, Lesley Manville, John Lithgow, Luke Evans, Rachel Dratch and June Squibb are among the movie and TV personalities in contention for theatrical awards.

Pink has been tapped to host the Tonys for the first time, a job she described as 'the honor of an entire lifetime' in a statement to People.

Hailing the Great White Way for having 'the literal hardest working people in showbiz,' she raved: 'Broadway has shaped my life and how I put my own shows together. It is a community that is supportive, and inclusive, and full of talent and love.'

Pink has been tapped the host the ceremony for the first time, a job she described as 'the honor of an entire lifetime' in a statement to People 

Daniel Radcliffe is pictured on opening night of the revived one-man show Every Brilliant Thing, for which he is nominated for best leading actor in a play

Although she has never performed on Broadway before, her pop songs have in the past been included in the jukebox musicals Moulin Rouge! and & Juliet. 

This year, Schmigadoon! and The Lost Boys soared ahead of their competitors to emerge as the most nominated shows of the night with 12 nods apiece.

The Lost Boys - based on Joel Schumacher's 1987 vampire movie of the same name starring Corey Haim, Corey Feldman, Jami Gertz, Jason Patric and Kiefer Sutherland - is one of the four productions nominated for best musical.

So is Schmigadoon!, based on an Apple TV+ sitcom about a floundering couple who find themselves transported into the world of a classic Broadway musical. 

Rounding out the category are Titanique, a Celine Dion jukebox musical doubling as a Titanic parody, and the UK import Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York).

The best play nominees include Mark Rosenblatt's buzzy Giant, starring John Lithgow as Roald Dahl in a story about the antisemitism allegations that swirled around the author after his blistering denunciation of the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon.

Among its competitors is The Balusters, a comedy by David Lindsay-Abaire, whose tragic drama Rabbit Hole was made into a 2010 film with Nicole Kidman.

Bess Wohl's play Liberation, set in the second-wave feminist movement, and Samuel D. Hunter's family drama Little Bear Ridge Road are up for best play as well. 

Mark Strong and Lesley Manville are nominated for their turns as the title character and his mother-turned-lover Jocasta in Oedipus, Robert Icke's revamp of Sophocles

Rose Byrne is pictured at the opening night curtain call of the revival of Noel Coward's comedy Fallen Angels, for which she is nominated for best leading actress in a play

John Lithgow is up for best lead actor in a play as Roald Dahl in Giant, which he is pictured starring in last year at the Harold Pinter Theatre in London before transferring to Broadway

Best revival of a musical stands as a three-way contest between Cats - now subtitled The Jellicle Ball - Ragtime and Richard O'Brien's The Rocky Horror Show.

Best revival of a play is a fuller field, with five nominees including classics like Noel Coward's Fallen Angels and Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman, as well as Oedipus, impresario Robert Icke's revamp of Sophocles' Oedipus Tyrannos.

Also up for the prize is the revival of Duncan Macmillan and Jonny Donahoe's one-man show Every Brilliant Thing, now starring Daniel Radcliffe, and Gina Gionfriddo's Becky Shaw, which traces the course of a disastrous blind date.

Best leading actor in a play is a starry category, with Radcliffe for Every Brilliant Thing facing off against Nathan Lane as Willy Loman in Death of a Salesman, John Lithgow as Roald Dahl in Giant, Mark Strong as the title character in Oedipus and Will Harrison as someone who kills a man with a single blow in the British play Punch.

Best leading actress in a play is similarly speckled with Hollywood glitz, in the shape of nominees like Rose Byrne in Fallen Angels, Carrie Coon in a revival of Tracy Letts' paranoia-themed play Bug and Lesley Manville as Jocasta in Oedipus.

Stage actresses Susannah Flood and Kelli O'Hara complete the category for their respective performances in Liberation and Fallen Angels.

The nominees for best featured actor in a play include Girls alum Christopher Abbott - whose girlfriend Aubrey Plaza is currently expecting a baby with him - for his turn as the title character's son Biff in Death of a Salesman.

Up against him are Solo star Alden Ehrenreich for Becky Shaw, Danny Burstein for the sci-fi play Marjorie Prime, Richard Thomas in The Balusters, Brandon J. Dirden in a revival of Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot and Ruben Santiago-Hudson in a revival of August Wilson's Joe Turner's Come and Gone.

Laurie Metcalf and Nathan Lane, pictured at the New York Drama Critics' Circle Awards, are both up for Tonys for a revival of Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman

Luke Evans, nominated for his role as Frank-N-Furter in Richard O'Brien's The Rocky Horror Show, is pictured in the production with his co-star Josh Rivera

Laurie Metcalf is nominated for best featured actress in a play as Linda in Death of a Salesman, against June Squibb in Marjorie Prime, Aya Cash for Giant, Marylouise Burke for The Balusters and Betsy Aidem for Liberation.

The Hobbit heartthrob Luke Evans landed a nod for best leading actor in a musical for Richard O'Brien's The Rocky Horror Show, in which he plays Dr Frank-N-Furter, the 'sweet transvestite' immortalized on film by Tim Curry. 

In order to triumph Sunday night, he will have to beat out Joshua Henry and Brandon Uranowitz for Ragtime, Sam Tutty in Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York) and Nicholas Christopher in a revival of the 1980s musical Chess, written by Andrew Lloyd Webber's ex-lyricist Tim Rice with ABBA's Benny Andersson and Bjorn Ulvaeus.

Stephanie Hsu, who was nominated for an Oscar for Everything Everywhere All at Once, is now up for the best leading actress in a musical Tony for The Rocky Horror Show, in which she plays Janet, the role Susan Sarandon committed to celluloid.

She finds herself pitted against Schmigadoon!'s Sara Chase - reprising her role from the Apple TV+ series - as well as Caissie Levy for Ragtime, Christiani Pitts for Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York) and Marla Mindelle for her star turn as Celine Dion in Titanique, which she also helped write.

Best featured actress in a musical is a category that this year includes two Saturday Night Live alumnae - Rachel Dratch as the narrator in The Rocky Horror Show and Ana Gasteyer for Schmigadoon!.

Their rivals are Shoshanna Bean in The Lost Boys as Lucy - the Dianne Wiest role in the film - as well as Nichelle Lewis for Ragtime and Hannah Cruz for Chess. 

Meanwhile, the nominees for best featured actor in a musical are Ali Louis Bourzgui playing the Kiefer Sutherland role of David in The Lost Boys, Andre de Shields as Old Deuteronomy in Cats and Layton Williams as the iceberg in Titanique, as well as Ben Levi Ross for Ragtime and Bryce Pinkham for Chess.

Melissa Barrera is pictured during the opening night curtain call of Titanique, the Celine Dion jukebox musical that doubles as a parody of Titanic

LJ Benet and Ali Louis Bourzgui are pictured in The Lost Boys - adapted from the 1987 vampire movie of the same name - which is one of the most nominated shows of the evening

Best original score, a category that was traditionally reserved for the songs from musicals, now also encompasses new background music added to the revivals of straight plays, in this case composed by Caroline Shaw for Death of a Salesman and Steve Bargonetti for Joe Turner's Come and Gone.

The musicals up for the prize are Schmigadoon!, with songs by Cinco Paul; The Lost Boys, with songs by the indie rock band The Rescues; and Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York), with music by Jim Barne and lyrics by Kit Buchan.

Best book of a musical is a category comprised this year of Jim Barne and Kit Buchan for Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York); Tye Blue, Marla Mindelle, and Constantine Rousouli for Titanique; Chris Hoch and David Hornsby for The Lost Boys; and Cinco Paul for Schmigadoon!.

The nominees for best direction of a play are Nicholas Hytner for Giant, Robert Icke for Oedipus, Kenny Leon for The Balusters, Joe Mantello for Death of a Salesman and Whitney White for Liberation.

Best direction of a musical, meanwhile, will either go to Michael Arden for The Lost Boys, Lear deBessonet for the Ragtime revival, Christopher Gattelli for Schmigadoon!, Tim Jackson for Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York) or Zhailon Levingston and Bill Rauch for the Cats revival. 

Tony Awards 2026 WINNERS - IN FULL

Best Musical

The Lost Boys

Schmigadoon! - WINNER

Titaníque

Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York)

Best Revival of a Musical

Cats: The Jellicle Ball

Ragtime - WINNER

Richard O'Brien's the Rocky Horror Show

Best Play

The Balusters

Giant

Liberation - WINNER

Little Bear Ridge Road 

Best Revival of a Play

Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman - WINNER

Becky Shaw

Every Brilliant Thing

Fallen Angels

Oedipus

Best Direction of a Musical

Michael Arden - The Lost Boys

Lear deBessonet - Ragtime

Christopher Gatteli - Schmigadoon!

Tim Jackson - Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York)

Zhailon Levinston and Bill Rauch - Cats: the Jellicle Ball - WINNER

Best Direction of a Play

Nicholas Hytner - Giant

Robert Icke - Oedipus

Kenny Leon - The Balusters

Joe Mantello - Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman - WINNER

Whitney White - Liberation

Best Lighting Design in a Play 

Dog Day Afternoon

Oedipus

August Wilson's Joe Turner's Come and Gone

Bug

The Fear of 13

Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman - WINNER

Best Sound Design of a Play

August Wilson's Joe Turner's Come and Gone

Oedipus

The Fear of 13

Bug

Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman - WINNER

Best Costume Design in a Musical 

Ragtime

Schmigadoon!

Cats: The Jellicle Ball - WINNER

The Lost Boys

Richard O'Brien's the Rocky Horror Show

Best Lighting Design in a Musical

Chess

Richard O'Brien's the Rocky Horror Show

Schmigadoon!

Cats: The Jellicle Ball

Ragtime

The Lost Boys - WINNER

Best Sound Design of a Musical 

Cats: The Jellicle Ball

Ragtime - WINNER

The Lost Boys

Richard O'Brien's the Rocky Horror Show

Schmigadoon!

Best Scenic Design in a Play 

Oedipus

Bug

Dog Day Afternoon

Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman - WINNER

Fallen Angels

Best Scenic Design in a Musical

Richard O'Brien's the Rocky Horror Show

Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York)

Cats: The Jellicle Ball

The Lost Boys - WINNER

Schmigadoon!

Best Book of a Musical

The Lost Boys

Schmigadoon! - WINNER

Titaníque

Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York)

Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Play

Will Harrison - Punch

Nathan Lane - Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman

John Lithgow - Giant - WINNER

Daniel Radcliffe - Every Brilliant Thing

Mark Strong - Oedipus

Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Play

Rose Byrne - Fallen Angels

Carrie Coon - Bug

Susannah Flood - Liberation

Lesley Manville - Oedipus - WINNER

Kelli O'Hara - Fallen Angels

Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Play

Christopher Abbott - Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman

Danny Burstein - Marjorie Prime

Brandon J. Dirden - Waiting for Godot

Alden Ehrenreich - Becky Shaw - WINNER

Ruben Santiago-Hudson - August Wilson's Joe Turner's Come and Gone

Richard Thomas - The Balusters

Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Play

Betsy Aidem - Liberation

Marylouise Burke - The Balusters

Aya Cash - Giant

Laurie Metcalf - Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman - WINNER

June Squibb - Marjorie Prime

Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical 

Nicholas Christopher - Chess

Luke Evans - Richard O'Brien's the Rocky Horror Show

Joshua Henry - Ragtime - WINNER

Sam Tutty - Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York)

Brandon Uranowitz - Ragtime

Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical

Sara Chase - Schmigadoon!

Stephanie Hsu - Richard O'Brien's the Rocky Horror Show

Caissie Levy - Ragtime - WINNER

Marla Mindelle - Titaníque

Christiani Pitts - Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York)

Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Musical 

Ali Louis Bourzgi - The Lost Boys - WINNER

André de Shields - Cats: The Jellicle Ball

Bryce Pinkham - Chess

Ben Levi Ross - Ragtime

Layton Williams - Titaníque

Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical 

Shoshana Bean - The Lost Boys - WINNER

Hannah Cruz - Chess

Rachel Dratch - Richard O'Brien's the Rocky Horror Show

Ana Gasteyer - Schmigadoon!

Nichelle Lewis - Ragtime

Best Original Score

Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman

August Wilson's Joe Turner's Come and Gone

The Lost Boys

Schmigadoon! - WINNER

Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York)

Best Orchestrations

Schmigadoon! - WINNER

The Lost Boys

Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York)

Chess

Cats: The Jellicle Ball

Best Choreography 

Schmigadoon!

Ragtime

Richard O'Brien's the Rocky Horror Show

Cats: The Jellicle Ball - WINNER

The Lost Boys

Best Costume Design in a Play 

Dog Day Afternoon

Liberation

Fallen Angels - WINNER

The Balusters

August Wilson's Joe Turner's Come and Gone

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