An ace of an appearance.
While everyone was overwhelmed with excitement over Kate Middleton’s Wimbledon outing today, the internet almost missed another surprise sighting in the stands. On Sunday, Julia Roberts and her husband of 22 years, Danny Moder, made a rare joint appearance (their first in two years!) at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club.
Cuddled up together in the Royal Box at Centre Court, the actress and the award-winning cinematographer watched on as Novak Djokovic faced off against Carlos Alcaraz during the men's singles final. For the occasion, Roberts aced her off-court style in a crisp white tennis dress from Gucci with sporty red striping on the collar and hem, as well as the bottoms of her sleeves. She accessorized with black sunglasses, a gold wristwatch with stacks of bracelets, and her green tourmaline engagement ring.
Her blonde hair was worn down in loose, shoulder-length waves with a middle part, while a matte pink lip and flushed cheeks rounded out her easy-going glam. Moder, for his part, wore a navy suit with a light blue button-up and a striped tie underneath.
Roberts and Moder have been married for more than two decades and share three children together—twins Hazel and Phinnaeus, 19, and a 17-year-old son named Henry.
Back in 2018, Roberts revealed that marrying Moder was the “best decision” she’s ever made. “It just gets deeper, it just gets more complex,” Julia said about their marriage on Gwyneth Paltrow’s Goop podcast. “You’re young and you fall in love and go, ‘Yeah, we’re going to get married and we’re going to build a house and will have kids,’ and all these things that we all kind of dream of, but you don’t know if you’re going to like the same couch and you don’t know if he is going to want to get patterned towels.”
She continued, "Then, of course, the bigger ones are, will you parent in a way that has balance to it, that holds hands in philosophy. You just don't know these things until you are right there doing it and we are so fortunate that there is some kind of some explicable harmony to the way we do things."