Lady Gaga tried to wear her $30M Tiffany diamond to Taco Bell

Lady Gaga tried to wear her $30M Tiffany diamond to Taco Bell
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She just wanted to live más. During a virtual appearance on “The Graham Norton Show” Friday, Lady Gaga recalled heading...

She just wanted to live más. During a virtual appearance on “The Graham Norton Show” Friday, Lady Gaga recalled heading to Taco Bell in her $30 million Tiffany & Co. diamond necklace after the 2019 Oscars, only to be stopped by security.

I didn’t know what was going to happen that night — I was just so happy to be there,” the 34-year-old “A Star Is Born” actress, who won Best Original Song for “Shallow,” told the host. “My sister and I were barreling through champagne backstage and when we left, I didn’t tell anyone, and I still had the diamond on.

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Naturally, Lady Gaga was in the mood to celebrate her big win. “Everyone freaked out that I was still wearing it. When I went to Madonna’s house, security guards were side-eyeing me,” she continued.

It wasn’t until the pop star set out in search of a late-night snack, however, that the jeweler’s guards intervened: “Eventually, when we were heading to Taco Bell, my car was pulled over and Tiffany’s security politely removed it from my neck!

Previously worn by Audrey Hepburn, the enormous cushion-cut yellow stone, dubbed the Tiffany Diamond, weighs in at 128.54 carats and is the most expensive piece of Oscars jewelry ever worn.

I don’t take any pain medication, because it’s not healthy for me,” she told Zane Lowe on Apple Music on Thursday. “But I’ve flirted with the idea of sobriety. I’m not there yet, but I flirted with it throughout the album.

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Gaga, 34, said she contemplated giving up alcohol while specifically recording a song named, “911,” which is about an “antipsychotic” drug the singer said she takes.

It’s something that came up as a result of me trying to work through the pain that I was feeling,” she said. “But part of my healing process was going, ‘Well, I can either lash the hell out of myself every day for continuing to drink, or I can just be happy that I’m still alive and keep going,’ and feel good”.

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