
As the lights dimmed inside Carnegie Hall Friday night, Mariska Hargitay dazzled from her seat in the heart of the iconic venue as she took in the applause from the crowd.
The actor made her feature film directorial debut with βMy Mom Jayne,β an HBO Original documentary about her mother, Jayne Mansfield, at New York City’s historic concert hall as part of the Tribeca Festival.
Hargitay not only appears in the documentary, she also serves as director and producer, and she was surrounded by her family and friends on the big night.
Before the screening, she posed in a glamorous gown paired with a shimmering wrap and white gloves. In between interviews on the red carpet, she ran over to take photos with a rotation of loved ones, including her siblings, whom she interviewed for the film.
She also posed with celebrity pals, including Cher and Jamie Lee Curtis, as well as her βLaw & Orderβ co-stars from over the years, including Christopher Meloni, Ice-T, Kelli Giddish and Peter Scanavino.

Scanavino told TODAY.com at the event that when he first saw a rough cut of the documentary, he was βjust totally blown awayβ by the project.
βYears ago, she started talking about it, but thereβs always things β when you deal with something like her mother, you donβt want to pry,β he said. βI always got the sense that it was kind of a very somewhat private thing for her.β
Curtis, who’s been open about her love for her new friend Hargitay, was equally as supportive of Hargitay’s personal project.

βI think any time we can see women step up and out and into the light of their truth, and do it with grace and humor and love and beauty, thatβs a message that I think does translate,β Curtis told TODAY.com at the premiere event.
βSheβs been carrying her family story for a long time, and itβs time for her to shed it in this gorgeous documentary and now step free as an artist,β she added. βNow we have a filmmaker.β
Hargitay said she was βvery afraidβ to make the film during a Q&A moderated by Griffin Dunne after the screening of the documentary.
βLearning to lean into the sharp edges and tolerate the uncomfortable feelings and sort of breathe through it, and then coming out the other side to this gorgeous support, these beautiful humans, all these people that were just trying to do the best that they can, and they did,β she said. βI look at it now, and Iβm so grateful for the choices that were made for me.β
In the film, Hargitay opens up about the moment in her 20s when she learned her biological father was not Mickey Hargitay, who raised her, but an Italian singer named Nelson Sardelli, whom Mansfield had an affair with in the process of divorcing Mickey Hargitay.
Mariska Hargitay met Sardelli when she was 30 but continued to keep the secret about her parentage until now.
At the Carnegie Hall Q&A, she expressed her gratitude for being able to be the one to share her journey about such a delicate topic in her own time.
βBut what I find so amazing is that this story has not gone out there, and it was mine to tell,β she said.
One constant in the film is Mansfieldβs love of music. The 1950s Hollywood starlet played piano and the violin, including in some of her television appearances, like on βThe Ed Sullivan Show.β
At one point in the archival footage, Mansfield says she one day hopes to play at Carnegie Hall. While this dream never came to fruition before her death at 34 after a car accident, the crowd at Carnegie Hall June 13 erupted into applause for Mansfield and her legacy, told through the eyes of her daughter.
Hargitay described the access to archival materials about her mom as βa gift from God.β
βAnd forget this filmmaker, director, or editor, producer, just as a person, as a little girl looking for their mother, and then I just got all this footage of all these moments of her speaking β¦ and not playing the role,β she said to the crowd. βAnd that was what I wanted. Thatβs what I was after.β
Hargitay said she βwent into the movie truly not liking the sound of my motherβs voice.β Mansfield was known for her breathy, higher-pitched voice in her on-camera appearances.
βEven in the beginning, listening to it, I was like, cringe,β Hargitay explained. βAnd then as the movie went on, and I got to hear her real voice. And tonight, as I was getting ready, I was playing her music and listening to songs that I had heard before. And everything has been reframed.β
βMy Mom Jayneβ will air June 27 on HBO at 8 p.m. ET and stream on HBO Max.