Emily Blunt and Stanley Tucci Make Their Hollywood Walk of Fame Ceremony a Family Affair
They are joined by their spouses, John Krasinski and Felicity Blunt

Reported by Harper's Bazaar.
Few Hollywood moments earn the word perfect, but Emily Blunt and Stanley Tucci receiving their Walk of Fame stars on the same day — while actively mid-sequel on the film that made them both household names — comes close. The timing is almost too good: the pair just wrapped The Devil Wears Prada 2, reprising their roles as Emily Charlton and Nigel Kipling nearly two decades after the original. And somewhere between that 2006 premiere and now, they became actual family — according to Harper's Bazaar, Blunt introduced Tucci to her sister Felicity at the first film's premiere, the two reconnected at Blunt's 2010 wedding to John Krasinski, and have been together ever since.
The Looks, The Speeches, The Chaos
Blunt arrived in a white Magda Butrym set from the designer's Spring/Summer 2026 collection — clean, architectural, exactly the kind of choice that photographs like a magazine cover without trying. Tucci countered in a navy striped suit, which is to say he looked like Stanley Tucci. Both leaned into the absurdity of the occasion with characteristic dry wit. "We spend far too much time together, and now we're going to spend even more time together as people trample over us," Blunt deadpanned. Tucci, for his part, thanked his family by name — then gestured toward Blunt with a theatrical pause: "And what's her name." He recovered: he's adored her since she was 22, he said, and it showed.
Then Meryl Streep took the stage and did what Meryl Streep does — made everyone in a three-block radius feel something. On Blunt: "God, Emily, I feel like I birthed you, really." On Tucci: she declared he'd officially outgrown "national treasure" status, having just returned from a global tour where, in her words, "the affection hurled at him globally" was simply inescapable. Her full taxonomy of Stanley Tucci — "urbane, sly, funny, bitchy, generous, curious, and so elegant" — reads like a résumé we'd all kill for.
What makes this ceremony register beyond the usual industry pageantry is the specificity of the relationships involved. This isn't a manufactured tribute — it's two people who built careers, a family, and now a franchise together, being honored for exactly that. Fashion, humor, and genuine affection all showed up, and none of it felt performed.
When the personal and the professional overlap this cleanly, even a star embedded in a sidewalk feels like it means something.
Read the original at Harper's Bazaar.


