‘Citadel’ London premiere: Priyanka Chopra stuns in a red dress, leaves husband Nick Jonas spellbound

Updated : Apr 19, 2023 11:13
|
Editorji News Desk

Actor Priyanka Chopra attended the London Global Premiere of her upcoming web series ‘Citadel’ with her husband-singer Nick Jonas and mother Madhu Chopra last night. The event was also attended by the team of the action thriller, including the creators, Russo Brothers, and its cast. Several photos and videos from the premiere are being shared online.

Nick shared a video from the event on social media, captioned, ‘#RedDress’ which shows Priyanka posing for the paparazzi in an off-shoulder red gown. For the occasion, Nick donned an all-black suit, paired with a turtleneck t-shirt.

The official Instagram account of ‘Citadel’ also shared many photos from the premiere with the caption, ‘// Operation London Initiated // The team behind Citadel has taken over London for the second stop on the global spy tour. #CitadelOnPrime.’

Varun Dhawan and Samantha Ruth Prabhu, who will star in the Indian version of the series, were also spotted at the event.

The first two episodes of the spy thriller series ‘Citadel’ will stream on OTT platform Prime Video from April 28. Priyanka will be seen playing the role of an elite spy opposite ‘Game of Thrones’ star Richard Madden.

Also Watch | ‘Koffee With Karan’ season 8: Ranbir Kapoor-Alia Bhatt to grace first episode? Read here
 

Priyanka Chopra Jonas

Recommended For You

Jugal Hansraj defends newcomers against 'Nadaaniyan' criticism
editorji | Entertainment

Jugal Hansraj defends newcomers against 'Nadaaniyan' criticism

Manoj Bharathiraja, son of director Bharathiraja, passed away at 48
editorji | Entertainment

Manoj Bharathiraja, son of director Bharathiraja, passed away at 48

editorji | Entertainment

Mohanlal's prayer at Sabarimala for Mammootty stirs controversy

editorji | Entertainment

Salman Khan's 'Sikandar' sees excelled advance bookings

editorji | Entertainment

Hansal Mehta and Kangana Ranaut engage in a heated debate over free speech