Nicole Kidman’s daughter Sunday Rose is all grown up.
The rarely seen 16-year-old stepped out with her mom for watch company Omega’s Her Time event in Paris on Sunday.
The mother-daughter duo walked the red carpet together ahead of the bash, posing as a pair for photographers.
Kidman, 57, and Sunday stood next to each other and faced each other, striking happy and serious faces for the cameras.
At one point, they even held hands.
For the outing, the actress paired a loose white cropped short-sleeved top with a matching tea-length skirt.
She wore her signature blond hair down and parted down the middle, with loose waves cascading down her shoulders.
Kidman completed her look with simple makeup, opting for a berry-colored lip.
Sunday, for her part, also donned a matching set, except hers was a gray tuxedo-inspired vest and fitted slacks.
The teen’s glam matched that of her mother, just as it had during Paris Fashion Week last month.
Kidman shares Sunday and daughter Faith Margaret, 13, with her husband, country singer Keith Urban, 56.
The Oscar winner is also mom to daughter Isabella, 31, and son Connor, 29, whom she shares with her ex-husband, Tom Cruise, 62.
Both Bella and Connor have chosen to follow in their father’s footsteps as practicing Scientologists, which has strained their relationship with Kidman.
But the “Eyes Wide Shut” star is close with her youngest two, both of whom recently watched parts of the 1999 thriller.
“At the AFI [Life Achievement Award] tribute [in April], they saw the scene where I get stoned,” Kidman told the Los Angeles Times earlier this month. “They showed that, and I was like, ‘Ooooh. Golly. OK.’ I sat next to my daughter Sunday watching that.”
Asked about Sunday’s reaction, Kidman told the outlet, “She said, ‘Mom, that was good.’ And then they showed that scene in [the 2004 mystery] ‘Birth’ … and she said, ‘That was really good.’”
Kidman said on the red carpet of the AFI ceremony that while her daughters are “very, very supportive and incredibly loving,” they are eager to “get started on their own careers.”