A NEPO baby is the spitting image of her Hollywood star mum as she appears at a debutant ball in Paris and eagle-eyed fans can see the resemblance.
Sharing the same attributes as her famous mother and father, many believe the apple of their eye hasn’t fallen too far from the tree whence it grew.
Apple Martin, 20, the daughter of Gwyneth Paltrow and Chris Martin, made a stunning debut at the annual Le Bal des Debutantes in Paris.
Her brother Moses, 18, and Gwyneth’s mum, Blythe Danner, also attended, making it a family affair.
She wore a sky-blue Valentino dress and had her blonde hair swept back in an elegant updo.
Her mother, now remarried to TV producer Brad Falchuk, was bursting with pride as she gushed about her daughter, saying she was her best friend and so much fun to be with.
Read more on Gwenyth Paltrow
After a five-year break, the Sliding Doors star is back on the big screen.
It’s her first acting role since she played Pepper Potts, the sidekick of Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jnr) in Avengers Endgame.
She revealed to the Mirror that she almost faced burnout and has not taken a starring role since she was pregnant with Apple, revealing: “When I was acting, I really burned myself out…
“I really got to the point where even the little things, like sitting in the van going to set, getting your make-up touch-ups, and everything – I really don’t know that I can bear it.”
Things began to come to a crescendo whilst filming Proof back in 2005 when she was carrying Apple.
She said: “The last movie I starred in, I was pregnant with my daughter.
“It was a movie called Proof, an adaptation of a play I did in London, and I was like, ‘I’ve had it. I can’t do this anymore.”
“I had morning sickness, and I was dying, and I had these five-page monologues.
“So when I had her, I knew I would take a big chunk of time off. And I’ve never starred in anything again.”
But now she is back costaring with Timothee Chalamet in Josh Safdie’s forthcoming film Marty Supreme, based on pro-table tennis whizz Marty Reisman, who won 22 major titles between 1946 and 2002.