Madonna, 66 years old, always steps out in sheer dresses that show off her skin and attract all eyes

On Sunday in Paris, Madonna stood out in a racy black translucent dress and long leather coat.

The Queen of Pop, 66, looked stunning in a black bodysuit under a see-through midi dress.

The Material Girl singer stayed warm in the long jacket with a fur collar and cuffed sleeves.

Madonna wore lace-up black knee-high boots and a matching handbag.

She left her hotel with her long blonde hair in a low bun and a bright white and black patterned head scarf.

Madonna layered gold necklaces and wore black shades.

The singer left her Paris hotel and headed to her car.

She appeared after Madonna posted melancholy photos from her Friday visit to the cemetery with her daughter Lourdes to the graves of her brother and mother.

The Like a Virgin singer, who has been struggling, posted a carousel of photos on her Instagram story while burying her brother Christopher, who died of pancreatic illness earlier this month.

She scribbled ‘Homecoming…’ over a photo of her late brother’s green marble tomb marker, including his name, birth, and death dates.

The singer visited her mother’s grave and left red roses. The Like a Prayer singer was five when she died aged 30 in 1963.

The singer’s brother and mother were buried in Calvary Cemetery in Kawkawlin, Michigan.

Lourdes, 28, had a photo taken kneeling near her grandmother’s headstone.

The Bay City, Michigan native posted a moving video of Levon Henry playing Duke Ellington’s Single Petal of a Rose on sax.

She also stopped by her grandmother’s house and posted a photo, saying, ‘When I was little, I believed my Nanoos house was a mansion!’

Madonna visited the cemetery less than a month after her 63-year-old brother died on October 4.

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She wrote a touching tribute to her brother, praising their friendship and support throughout tough times.

I lost my brother Christopher. The closest person to me for so long. It’s hard to explain our closeness. But it came out of an understanding that we were different and society would punish us for not conforming.

We danced through childhood madness holding hands. Dance kept us together like superglue.

The singer said dance helped the siblings express themselves early on.

Madonna added: ‘Discovering Dance in our small Midwestern town saved me and my brother. Christopher, my ballet teacher, gave my brother a secure space to be gay, a word that was never spoken or murmured where we lived.

After gathering the guts, I moved to New York to dance. Brother followed. We danced through New York City’s chaos again, holding hands! We consumed art, music, and film like voracious animals in the epicenter of their explosion. We danced despite AIDS’ lunacy.

Madonna said rebellion brought her and her late brother together, making them thieves.