has published a ranking of 20 onstage dresses and performative looks to mark the release of Mother Mary, the film starring Anne Hathaway and Michaela Coel. Among the outfits singled out in the list is Debbie Harry’s T-shirt, placed alongside a mix of stage looks built to be seen, remembered and argued over.
The piece is less straight news than a playlist of fashion moments, but its timing matters because it lands with the film’s release and frames Mother Mary as part of a wider conversation about performance, image and costume. Debbie Harry appears in the list as one of several performers included in the ranking, which turns a simple style feature into a small celebration of stage clothes as cultural shorthand.
That is also where the friction sits. A ranking can elevate one look while leaving another out, and the story here is the selection itself: 20 choices, one T-shirt among them, and a film launch used as the occasion for revisiting what artists wear when they are meant to command a room. For readers, the takeaway is plain. is not reporting a new event so much as using Mother Mary’s release to spotlight the looks that still get people talking, with Debbie Harry’s T-shirt among the standouts.






