Meghan looked chic in an all black ensemble consisting of dark trousers, a turtleneck top and black shoes. Harry looked equally dapper in a pair of jeans, his brown Chelsea boots and a dark jacket.
Cookie Queens is a documentary about four girls who “strive to be a top-selling ‘Cookie Queen,’ navigating an $800 million business in which childhood and ambition collide.”
Harry and Meghan serve as executive producers through their media company, Archewell Productions.
The couple were seen mingling with Amy Redford, Robert Redford’s daughter, who was also at the premiere, Sundance Film Festival director Eugene Hernandez and filmmaker Alysa Nahmias. Meghan was also pictured chatting to the girls starring in the documentary.
It is the first joint appearance of the Sussex couple, after a busy week for the Duke. Harry was in the UK all week to attend hearings in his trial against Associated Newspapers Limited (ANL).
The Duke is one of the seven people, including Sir Elton John, Baroness Doreen Lawrence and Liz Hurley, suing the publisher over allegations of unlawful information gathering.
ANL strongly denies wrongdoing and is defending the claims.
Giving evidence for around two hours on Wednesday, the duke appeared emotional as he told the court that ANL had made his wife Meghan Markle‘s life “an absolute misery”.
In court, the duke said the case against ANL felt like a “recurring traumatic experience” and a “repeat of the past”, adding: “I have never believed that my life is open season to be commercialised by these people.”
In written submissions for the trial, Antony White KC, for ANL, said the publisher “strongly denies” that there was any unlawful information gathering, including voicemail interception, directed at the duke.
He continued that the articles “were sourced entirely legitimately from information variously provided by contacts of the journalists responsible, including individuals in the Duke of Sussex’s social circle, press officers and publicists, freelance journalists, photographers and prior reports”.