Billie Eilish Chooses Celine Flats for Premiere of Billie Eilish Hit Me Hard And Soft: The Tour (live)
Billie Eilish wore Celine’s $900 Flat Sneaker to the UK premiere of billie eilish hit me hard and soft: the tour (live), pairing the ballet-style shoe with an extra-oversize suit. The appearance came before the concert film reaches theaters on May 8.
Spencer Singer's Celine look
Stylist Spencer Singer dressed Eilish in head-to-toe Celine, including a cobalt blue button-down, charcoal gray trousers, a herringbone wallet chain, and chunky rings. Her neck tie matched the shoes’ black-and-white palette, while the Flat Sneaker added slim sneakerina soles, ruffled ribbons, black grosgrain sidewalls, white shoelaces, metallic gold logo stamping, and Triomphe emblems on the heels.
The premiere marks another step in the pop-to-film pipeline, with a tour package moving from stage wardrobe to theatrical release. Eilish has already made sneakers part of the tour's visual language, which keeps the premiere look aligned with the show rather than turning it into a separate fashion event.
Tour shoes since 2024
Eilish wore only sneakers on the Hit Me Hard and Soft tour, which began around Sept. 2024. She started in Nike Air Jordan 4 Craft sneakers in army green suede-and-leather high-tops, then shifted by Dec. 2024 to Nike Air Jordan 3 Retro sneakers in the navy blue and gray Georgetown color.
That change gives the premiere a clearer read: this is not a one-off red-carpet pivot, but a continuation of the footwear line she has used onstage for months. The Celine pair brings the tour’s sneaker-first identity into a formal setting without breaking from the silhouette she has already worn in performance.
May 8 theatrical release
The main practical date for ticket buyers is May 8, when Hit Me Hard and Soft: The Tour hits theaters. Eilish’s UK premiere look arrived ahead of that rollout, giving the film a preview moment while the concert package is still moving toward cinemas.
For viewers deciding whether to go, the useful detail is the consistency: the stage version relied on sneakers, and the premiere version keeps that idea intact with a luxury label and a $900 price tag. That makes the film feel less like a separate fashion campaign and more like a polished extension of the tour itself.