Leonardo DiCaprio’s girlfriend Camila Morrone sizzles in bikini with look-alike mom
This hot mama is making a splash.
Leonardo DiCaprio’s girlfriend Camila Morrone hit the beach in St-Tropez on Friday, but it was her look-alike mom Lucila Solá who stole the show.
Morrone, 25, showed off her sensational figure in a tiny white bikini as she was joined by her model mama, 46, who sizzled in an equally skimpy two-piece.
DiCaprio — who, at 47, is a year older than his girlfriend’s mom — wasn’t present for the beach outing.
Instead, Morrone and Solá enjoyed some girl time, swimming in the sea as they chatted with a group of female friends.
The mother-daughter duo is known to be incredibly close — and it’s not just their good looks that they have in common.
The pair share a penchant for dating big-name film stars, with Solá previously dating Al Pacino, 82. The mom romanced the “Scarface” superstar for 10 years, from 2008 until 2018.
Morrone became close to Pacino, who was her quasi-stepfather for the entirety of her teens.
Back in 2018, Morrone and DiCaprio were pictured dining with Solá and Pacino at a Beverly Hills eatery.
Solá was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, where she met and married actor Maximo Morrone.
The couple relocated to Los Angeles in the early 1990s, where they welcomed their only child, Camile. They split in 2006.
Solá has worked as a model and actress, with her daughter following in her footsteps.
Morrone was featured in the pages of Teen Vogue and appeared in Jame Franco’s movie “Bukowski” in 2013 — but her public profile exploded when she began dating DiCaprio four years later.
The couple purportedly met at the Cannes Film Festival in 2017 and their romance is still going strong five years later.
DiCaprio, who has developed a reputation for dating models decades his junior, is attempting to keep the romance low-key, not speaking publicly about Morrone.
It’s unclear whether the “Titanic” actor is also currently in St-Tropez. His girlfriend’s outing comes less than a week after it was reported that his nonprofit foundation awarded grants to a dark money group, which, in turn, funneled money to a law firm spearheading climate nuisance lawsuits nationwide.
A complaint was then filed by the US Department of Justice.
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