Sharon Stone looked nothing short of sensational as she attended a photo call at the Taormina Film Festival in Italy on Friday.
The actress, 66, stunned in a dramatic sleeveless floral gown that perfectly showcased her incredibly toned arms.
Sharon’s frock boasted a halter neck and hood as well as flowing panels that cascaded onto the marble floor.
The Basic Instinct actress accentuated her age defying features with glam make-up while her blonde locks slicked back in a chic wet look style.
Sharon couldn’t wipe the smile off her face as she posed up a storm and later wore a pair of stylish shades.
Sharon Stone, 66, looked nothing short of sensational as she attended a photo call at the Taormina Film Festival in Italy on Friday
The actress stunned in a dramatic sleeveless floral gown that perfect showcased her incredibly toned arms
Sharon’s frock boasted a halter neck and hood as well as flowing panels that cascaded onto the marble floor
It comes after she recreated her iconic interrogation scene from the erotic classic Basic Instinct in a sexy lingerie shoot.
The actress took to Instagram to share a jaw-dropping image clad in red lace lingerie, 32 years after she famously starred as the sexy killer Catherine Tramell.
The famous interrogation scene in Basic Instinct saw Sharon’s character Catherine quizzed by police, including Michael Douglas.
Amid the bombardment of questions, Catherine distracts them when she uncrosses the recrosses her legs, leaving the men flustered seeing as she was underwear-free at the time.
The scene was highly controversial at the time, and now has gone down as one of the most infamous in movie history.
And the actress proudly showcased her incredible figure in the sexy lingerie from Bloomers Intimate, posing with her legs crossed in an ode to the legendary scene.
Despite the moment turning Sharon into an overnight sensation, the Academy Award nominee has maintained in the past that she was ‘tricked’ into exposing herself for the cameras.
In her memoir The Beauty of Living Twice, Sharon described how she slapped her director Paul Verhoeven in fury and walked out of a preview of the erotic thriller after discovering his assurances that it wouldn’t show up on screen had been a lie and that the audience could — as she put it — ‘see all the way to Nebraska’.
Sharon exuded old Hollywood glamour in the outfit
The Basic Instinct actress accentuated her age defying features with glam make-up
Sharon couldn’t wipe the smile off her face as she posed up a storm and later wore a pair of stylish shades
The stunner waved at fans as they waited to catch a glimpse of her
Lowering her hood she revealed her blonde locks had been slicked back in a wet look style
For his part, Verhoeven has vehemently dismissed her claims that she was taken by surprise in the leg-crossing scene.
He said: ‘Any actress knows what she’s going to see if you ask her to take off her underwear and point there with the camera.’
But the Hollywood veteran has also been adamant she didn’t have any regrets about making the film.
‘Regrets are like farts, you can’t get them back. Once they’re out, there’s stinky and gone,’ she quipped previously.
It comes after she recreated her iconic interrogation scene from the erotic classic Basic Instinct in a sexy lingerie shoot
The actress famously starred as the sexy killer Catherine Tramell in the 1992 film, where she uncrossed her legs during an interrogation, despite being underwear-free at the time
In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter recently Sharon claimed the $18 million she had accrued after more than two decades in the film industry evaporated during the years she was unable to work due to brain damage from the stroke.
The actress — who has controversially claimed that Kevin Spacey’s banishment from Hollywood was partially inspired by homophobia — attributed her loss of millions to people around her who allegedly mismanaged her money as she struggled to regain basic functions, like the ability to read, which she lost ‘for a couple of years’.
In total, Stone said it took her seven years to mostly recover from the effects of the life-threatening stroke, which doctors gave her just one in 100 odds of surviving.
‘People took advantage of me over that [recovery] time,’ Stone claimed. ‘I had $18 million saved because of all my success, but when I got back into my bank account, it was all gone.’
She described the surreal feeling of having little to her name once she was competent enough to take over her finances.
‘My refrigerator, my phone — everything was in other people’s names,’ she revealed.
She then clarified: ‘I had zero money.’