Fashion

The Monaco Grand Prix Has the Most Star-Studded Paddock

Everyone from Kim Kardashian to Cynthia Erivo, Lindsey Vonn, and Olivia Wilde made the trip to the French Riviera for the F1 race

By Elliot O·Jun 8, 2026·2 min read
The Monaco Grand Prix Has the Most Star-Studded Paddock

Reported by Harper's Bazaar.

There is no race on the Formula 1 calendar that operates quite like Monaco. The circuit is narrow, the overtaking is nearly impossible, and absolutely none of that matters — because the real spectacle has always been the paddock. Every May, the Principality transforms into the most glamorous square mile on earth, and the guest list reads less like a racing roster and more like a Met Gala afterparty that somehow ended up trackside.

According to Harper's Bazaar, this year's Monaco Grand Prix delivered exactly that energy. Kim and Khloé Kardashian made the trip, because of course they did — Kim in particular looking precisely as composed as someone who treats international racing weekends as casual calendar fillers. Cynthia Erivo and Lindsey Vonn were spotted together, a pairing so effortlessly chic it felt almost staged. Olivia Wilde showed up. Noah Schnapp was there. Tommy Hilfiger brought Dee Ocleppo. Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones arrived as the veteran power couple the event practically requires at this point.

Royalty, Racing, and Real Dressing

The Monaco Grand Prix has always had a complicated relationship with monarchy — the race runs through a sovereign state, after all. Princess Charlene of Monaco and Prince Albert II attended as hosts of their own kingdom, which is a level of home-court advantage that most celebrities can only dream of. Meanwhile, Princess Maria Chiara of Bourbon Two Sicilies, Princess Camilla, Duchess of Castro, and Princess Maria Carolina of Bourbon Two Sicilies brought an additional layer of European aristocracy to the stands. Patrick Dempsey — who is a serious racing driver in his own right, not just a celebrity cosplaying as one — and Terry Crews rounded out a crowd that defied easy categorization. Alexandra Leclerc, in her own right, carried the weight of being a Leclerc at a race where her family name carries significant local meaning.

What Monaco does better than any other Grand Prix is blur the line between fashion event and sporting event until the distinction becomes irrelevant. The dress code is unwritten but universally understood — elevated, intentional, slightly European in its restraint but never boring. You do not show up to the Monaco paddock underdressed, and the celebrities who make this pilgrimage annually understand that implicitly. It is one of the few places left where getting dressed still feels like an occasion worth taking seriously.

Monaco isn't just the most prestigious race on the calendar — it's proof that the right venue can turn a sport into a full fashion moment.


Read the original at Harper's Bazaar.

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