The Glamorous Cast of Love Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. Carolyn Bessette Celebrated Over Pasta and Parliaments

“There s a lot of love that went into making this love story—and I hope you feel it tonight,” Ryan Murphy told a jam-packed audience at Carnegie Hall in Manhattan on Tuesday evening. The prolific screenwriter, director, and producer was readying for the crowd to sink their teeth into the premiere of Love Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. Carolyn Bessette—and the hallowed venue was fitting, given that the late couple were regulars there during their lifetime.
Chronicling the whirlwind courtship, public scrutiny, and ultimately tragic fate of Kennedy Jr. and Bessette, the FX series has been eagerly anticipated, spurring months of online chatter—much of it centered around the uncanny resemblance between the cast and their real-life counterparts. Counted among those eager to see it firsthand were Martha Stewart, The Gilded Age’s Louisa Jacobson—whose sister Grace Gummer stars as Caroline Kennedy—and The White Lotus’ Sam Nivola—there to proudly cheer on his father, Alessandro Nivola, in his turn as Calvin Klein.
Ahead of the screening, Murphy made his way around the room, inviting each member of the ensemble cast to stand for a round of applause. Before landing—inevitably—on the show’s breakout face, prompting Zankel Hall to swell with commotion: “Please meet your Carolyn Bessette: Sarah Pidgeon.” (The actress’s sequin-adorned gown from Chanel’s Pre-Fall 2026 collection, plumed from the waist down, was a star in its own right.)
The lights dimmed and, an hour later, rose again to show faces lit with unabated enthusiasm; the crowd’s applause carrying well into the final credits. Clearly, it was a hit. Of course, no screening is complete without a celebratory after-party. The festivities continued until late over at The Pool; the swanky mid-century modern restaurant where everything, from the pristine plating to the prime rib, pays homage to how revered former president JFK once dined at the White House.
The space was outfitted with a few new touches for the occasion too: Credenzas filled with sundries that could have very well appeared in the duo’s home. Photo albums and picture frames of Paul Anthony Kelly’s Kennedy Jr. and Pidgeon’s Bessette alongside vintage issues of George (Kennedy Jr.’s very own pioneering politics-meets-lifestyle publication.) The cherry on top? Trinket dishes wielding items that endearing style muse CBK would have never left the house without: Parliaments, keys, and her signature oval sunnies.
Guests buzzed, sipped, and danced around a white floral installation that anchored the room, many of them keeping eyes peeled for platters of Major Food Group’s spicy rigatoni that were making the rounds. (Indulging felt obligatory—it is Carbone’s sister restaurant, after all.) And Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy, famously partial to SpaghettiO’s eaten straight from the can, would surely have approved.






