Lizzo showed off her incredible weight loss in a strapless red dress at the 11th Breakthrough Prize Ceremony on Saturday.
The singer, 36, looked sensational in the figure hugging number which boasted a ruched and pleated long skirt.
Lizzo turned up the glamour by wearing a pair of long coordinated gloves which featured very long red nails on the ends.
The star, who was born Melissa Jefferson, styled her long dark tresses in a loose wet do and elevated her frame in a pair of towering heels.
At the prestigious event held at Barker Hanger in Santa Monica, Lizzo posed up a storm on the star-studded red carpet.
She completed her evening ensemble with a dramatic palette of makeup including red eye shadow, heavy blush and a swipe of matching lipstick.

Lizzo showed off her incredible weight loss in a strapless red dress at the 11th Breakthrough Prize Ceremony on Saturday

The singer, 36, looked sensational in the figure hugging number which boasted a ruched and pleated long skirt
It comes after Lizzo used her Instagram platform to show off her striking weight loss last month.
The rapper wore nothing but a pair of black underwear from her Yitty range, and a dark gray T-shirt.
Lizzo lifted the top to expose a portion of her shrinking midriff as she rested a hand on her abdomen.
She admired her reflection as she snapped a mirror selfie while sunlight poured over her body.
Also included in the carousel post were a string of various memes, including multiples with references to the Apple TV+ series Severance.
She wrote in the caption, ‘Me, myself & all my memes: (I still haven’t seen the season finale of severance).’
Her face was fully made up in warm-toned brown hues and her hair was styled in a voluminous mop of ginger-toned curls.
In a second post shared over the weekend, Lizzo modeled another one of her Yitty fashions — a snug-fitting, black, mini dress undergarment.

Lizzo turned up the glamour by wearing a pair of long coordinated gloves which feature very long red nails on the ends

The star, who was born Melissa Jefferson, styled her long dark tresses in a loose wet do and elevated her frame in a pair of towering heels

At the prestigious event held at Barker Hanger in Santa Monica, Lizzo completed her evening ensemble with a dramatic palette of makeup
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Slim Lizzo shows off weight loss as she poses in Yitty underwear
She playfully and provocatively bounced up and down in a chair, exposing her ample cleavage while dancing to her latest single, Still Bad.
Lizzo wrote under the reel, ‘Thee only correct way to dance to Still Bad.’
Days after releasing the second single from her forthcoming album, titled Love In Real Life, she took to the social media app X to defend online criticism surrounding it.
‘Saying my brand of “poptimism” doesn’t work in a “post Covid world” is a lazy take.. As if I didn’t release ‘about damn time’ post pandemic.. As if I didn’t write ‘about damn time’ to be a post lockdown anthem to inspire us to get outside and together again.. and was successful at it btw ;)’ she wrote across two posts on Monday, March 17.
She explained further about her single, which debuted on March 13, ‘Still Bad is a breakup song with the world.
‘It literally starts with me saying “I’m bouta throw my phone away.” It’s a call to action for the negativity we experience on our phones and how we need to disengage and recenter. The girls that get it, get it.’
Lizzo compared herself to the musical greats that came before her as she argued, ‘I think seeing and hearing a black woman make real music with radical joy triggers miserable people… but I follow in the footsteps of Janet, of Funkadelic, of Earth Wind and Fire… nobody’s doing it like me for Us. And I stand on that.’
The following day she continued the conversation by posting: ‘The way this world treats black women is sickening… blacklisted Janet and now 20yrs later yall calling her music “cute black girl bops” & giving her flowers… Dogged Whitney for her love life & called her a drug addict for laughs but now yall wanna honor her. Yall laughed at Tina’s abuse and never let her forget… The least protected person in America…’