Kate Hudson looked the spitting image of her mother Goldie Hawn as they attend a screening of Song Sung Blue at AMC The Grove 14 in Los Angeles on Tuesday.
The actress, 46, and her Oscar-winning mother, 80, looked like they could pass for sisters with their similar styled blonde, shoulder length blown out hair.
Kate stunned in a short sleeved maxi dress which she accessorised with simple gold drop earrings.
Meanwhile The First Wives Club star showed off her youthful complextion while sporting a smart black blazer and trousers.
The mother-daughter duo took to the stage at the theatre for a Q&A with fans ahead of the special screening.
In the new film, which was released on Boxing Day, Kate and co-star Hugh Jackman play real-life husband and wife, Mike and Claire Sardina – Milwaukee-based Neil Diamond impersonators from the 1990s who formed a band called Lightning And Thunder.
Kate Hudsonlooked the spitting image of her mother Goldie Hawnas they attend a screening of Song Sung Blue at AMC The Grove 14 in Los Angeleson Tuesday
The actress, 46, and her Oscar-winning mother, 80, looked like they could pass for sisters with their similar styled blonde, shoulder length blown out hair
The musical drama follows the pairs love and success performing as Neil Diamond tribute band, proving it’s never too late to follow your dreams.
It comes after Goldie said she is proud that her three children have followed in her acting footsteps, especially since they did it without her help.
The Oscar winner opened up about her parenting style in a Q&A after a special screening of 1974’s The Sugarland Express at the Academy Museum in Los Angeles last year.
Referring to her kids, Goldie said she wanted to keep their childhoods as normal as possible and had actually blocked daughter Kate from being offered a part.
‘I didn’t call an agent and ask them to be represented. I never did that,’ the Private Benjamin star said, per People.
‘In fact, they wanted Katie for some show, and she was still in high school. And I didn’t let her do it because I didn’t want her at that age, I wanted her to live a normal life, finish school, at which point you figure that out, but don’t start too soon.’
The plan seems to have worked. Kate was 21 when she received an Academy Award nomination for her breakout role in 2000’s Almost Famous and has enjoyed a lengthy career in a variety of roles, including How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days, and Glass Onion.
Goldie’s sons Oliver Hudson, 48, and Wyatt Russell, 38, have also taken up acting, with Russell most recently appearing in Thunderbolts.
Kate stunned in a short sleeved dress which she accessorised with simple gold drop earrings
Meanwhile The First Wives Club star showed off her youthful complextion while sporting a smart black blazer and trousers
The mother-daughter duo took to the stage at the theatre for a Q&A with fans ahead of the special screening
In the new film, Kate and co-star Hugh Jackman play real-life husband and wife, Mike and Claire Sardina – Milwaukee-based Neil Diamond impersonators called Lightning And Thunder
The First Wives Club star shares Kate and Oliver with ex-husband Bill Hudson, 75, and Wyatt, 38, with her longtime partner Kurt Russell, 74.
Goldie said her kids were her ‘legacy,’ and that she valued their characters more than their professional achievements, and shies away from giving them advice.
‘No, they have to cut their own way,’ she told the audience. ‘They don’t want advice from their parents. Who does?… Too much advice. And also they’re doing it on their own.
‘What feels good is that they’re amazing human beings,’ she said.
‘They happen to be talented… They’re great humans, all of them. And all my grandchildren — now I have eight — and they’re great humans.’
Goldie hopes her kids surpass her in their careers.
‘Who doesn’t want to be bigger and better than their parents? That’s the whole idea,’ she explained.
‘The fact that we supersede our parents, that’s what we’re supposed to do. So we wanted that. Kurt and I wanted that. And so when we look at it, we go, “Oh my God, this is just so awesome.”‘
The proud grandma recently gave three of her grandchildren parts in her upcoming educational film Brain Buddies.
‘I wrote and produced it, and three of my grandkids, Wilder, Bodhi, and Rio, did the voices,’ she said of Oliver’s kids, ages 17, 14, and 11 respectively.
‘What I loved is how well they followed the direction that I was giving them, and they were great at intonation and how they delivered the lines and what their characters are and all of it,’ she said of the experience.
‘So for me, it was a memorable joy that I will have for the rest of my life, and the children will never forget it.’