A pregnant Leelee Sobieski arrives on the red carpet for the opening night of the Opera “Tosca” at the Metropolitan Opera in Lincoln Center, New York City.


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Leelee Sobieski and her fashion designer fiance, Adam Kimmel, are expecting their first child together, Usmagazine.com confirms. “The happy couple are thrilled to be expecting their first child in December,” the star’s rep tells Us. This will be the first child for both. Usmagazine.com confirmed that the couple were engaged in June, when the star, 26, wore an engagement ring at the premiere of her latest film, Public Enemies.

Leelee Sobieski is engaged to menswear designer Adam Kimmel, a friend of the couple tells Usmagazine.com.
See who else will say “I Do” this year.
Sobieski, 26, donned her marquise diamond engagement ring to the L.A. premiere of her latest flick, the Johnny Depp drama Public Enemies, in Los Angeles June 23. On the red carpet, Sobieski told Us she was “leaving to meet him in Paris” the next day.
The actress rose to fame playing a modern day Lolita, opposite Tom Cruise, in the 1999 Stanley Kubrick film, Eyes Wide Shut.
In addition to modeling for her fiance’s Fall/Winter 2009 Look Book, she recently filmed the indie drama The Mad Cow with Arrested Development star Jeffrey Tambor.
Source, Fame Pictures

Celebs at the opening of the Dolce & Gabbana flagship boutique on Robertson Boulevard, Beverly Hills, California.
Pictured: Rumer Willis, Paris Hilton, Nicky Hilton, Amy Smart, LeeLee Sobieski, Nicole Richie and Joel Madden, Ginnifer Goodwin, Lauren Conrad & Rachel Bilson.

Leelee Sobieski has a recurring dream in which she’s a Native American woman.
The blonde-haired, blue-eyed New Yorker insists the dream is so vivid she’s often startled when she wakes up and realises she’s not hunting in a canoe.
She says, “When I close my eyes and imagine what I look like, I’m completely different. I imagine myself as a Native American in a canoe with a papoose around my neck and sitting alongside my warrior husband, my long black hair gliding through the water, my bow and arrow poised to shoot us some dinner. (Then) I see my light hair and light eyes and it freaks me out, like, ‘Where’s my inner Native American? Who took my canoe?’”
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