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Jeff Bezos And Lauren Sanchez Wedding: What We Know About Venice Extravaganza

Jeff Bezos And Lauren Sanchez Wedding: What We Know About Venice Extravaganza

Forbes5 hours ago

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and former journalist Lauren Sánchez Bezos stepped out on the town Saturday after the newlyweds exchanged vows on a small Venetian island Friday, the centerpiece of what has become a star-studded, and controversial, multi-day ceremony hosted in Venice, Italy. (Related: All the photos of the celebrity attendees.)
Amazon's founder Jeff Bezos and his wife Lauren Sanchez Bezos arrive at the Harry's Bar restaurant a ... More day after their wedding in Venice on June 28, 2025. Photo by Stefano Rellandini / AFP
How long—and how much? The wedding began its 'multi-day celebration' Thursday and continued into Saturday, when the Bezoses visited Harry's Bar, an iconic Venetian landmark.
Where: The Bezoses tied the knot on San Giorgio Island on Friday, multiple outlets reported, a small locale off the coast of Venice's St. Mark's Square which contains a centuries-old church known for its bell tower.
Is it official? Though the couple held their wedding in Italy, city officials told CNN they have not received an official marriage request from the couple, indicating their celebrations are ceremonial and that they may already have married in the United States.
Who is performing? Friday's wedding celebration featured a performance by Matteo Bocelli, the son of opera singer Andrea Bocelli, Reuters reported.
Venice Mayor Luigi Brugnaro, who has spoken out against protesters demonstrating against the wedding, told Italian daily newspaper Corriere della Sera the wedding 'will have economic repercussions worth millions of euros for our city.'
Protests by locals, who are upset with overtourism and Bezos' links to President Donald Trump, threatened the festivities, and sources told Reuters the threat of protests prompted Bezos to move a wedding party from a central nightlife area to the more secluded Arsenale, which is surrounded by water and impossible to reach by land when bridges are raised.
Get Forbes Breaking News Text Alerts : We're launching text message alerts so you'll always know the biggest stories shaping the day's headlines. Text 'Alerts' to (201) 335-0739 or sign up here . Who Is On The Guest List For The Bezos-Sanchez Wedding?
Venice officials have said the guest list for Bezoses wedding is limited to 200 people. On Tuesday afternoon, Ivanka Trump and husband Jared Kushner, who were rumored to attend, were photographed arriving in Venice. Other celebrities so far spotted in Venice for the festivities include Kylie and Kendall Jenner, Kim Kardashian, Oprah Winfrey, Tom Brady, Gayle King, Orlando Bloom, Leonardo DiCaprio, Usher and Sydney Sweeney. Investor Michael Kives has also been seen in Venice in addition to Dolce & Gabbana founder and billionaire Domenico Dolce and Queen Rania of Jordan, wife of the country's King Abdullah II. Bezos invited President Donald Trump to the wedding, the Journal reported, though Trump did not make the trip due to scheduling conflicts.
Festivities kicked off Thursday night, after many of the Bezoses' celebrity guests arrived, with a party at the Madonna dell'Orto, a 14th-century cathedral, CNN reported. Guests appear to be adhering to strict social media rules, CNN reported, as some of the most social media-savvy guests, like the Kardashians, have not posted any pictures from inside the venue. After Friday's wedding ceremony, celebrations are expected to conclude with a wedding reception Saturday at the Arsenale, a shipyard and armory that is now the site of an annual Venetian cultural festival. The Saturday reception was initially set to take place at the Scuola Grande Della Misericordia, a 14th-century building, but the event was moved because of concerns over protests, the Wall Street Journal reported, though protests are still planned for the new location. Reuters reported Lady Gaga and Elton John may perform at Saturday's party, though The Hollywood Reporter said this week Gaga was not asked to perform. The Bezoses first appeared in Venice on Wednesday, where they had dinner at the home of billionaire Barry Diller and his wife, fashion designer Diane von Furstenberg, the New York Times reported. Who Is Protesting The Wedding And Why?
Some locals in Venice, which has dealt with overtourism that has strained the city's infrastructure and services for years, have staged protests under the name 'No Space for Bezos' over concerns the wedding's scale will worsen some of the issues created by excessive tourist crowds, with more demonstrations planned to disrupt this week's festivities. Protesters are planning a march on Saturday, according to posts by the 'No Space for Bezos' group on Instagram, which will start at the Stazione di Venezia Santa Lucia train station, located roughly 1.5 miles away from the Arsenale venue. The group has already held multiple demonstrations. On Monday, the Greenpeace environmental activist organization joined 'No Space for Bezos' in Venice's St. Mark's Square, unveiling a banner with Bezos' face that read: 'IF YOU CAN RENT VENICE FOR YOUR WEDDING YOU CAN PAY MORE TAX.' Police quickly took the banner away, the Associated Press reported. They previously hoisted a banner that says 'Bezos' with an 'X' through it on the San Giorgio Maggiore church's bell tower. Federica Toninelli, a Venetian activist with 'No Space for Bezos,' told Reuters the wedding is also a 'symbol of the exploitation of the city by outsiders.' Protesters have threatened to block access to canals and city streets in an effort to block wedding attendees from reaching party venues in the city, according to Variety. Oliviero Cassarà, a lead organizer and activist, said in a statement 'No Space for Bezos' has zero issue with Americans or people getting married in Venice, instead criticizing Bezos for his links to Trump and blasting the president's controversial trade policies. 'Bezos supported Trump economically and politically and is consequently co-responsible for this drift against us Italian and European citizens,' Cassarà said. Brugnaro has spoken out against the protesters and tried to reassure them the city is capable of handling the event, citing its hosting of the Venice Film Festival and G7 Summit. Brugnaro said he was 'ashamed of those who behave like this,' Variety reported. How Much Will The Wedding Cost?
Multiple reports have said the wedding will predictably cost millions of dollars. Reuters reported an estimated total cost of $46.5 million to $55.6 million. The Journal reported a luxury wedding with 200 guests such as Bezos' costs about $4 million, citing Jamie Simon, director of events at luxury planning firm Banana Split, which organized the multiday wedding between Sofia Richie Grainge and Atlantic Records CEO Elliot Grainge in 2023. Who Is Organizing The Bezos-Sánchez Wedding?
The Journal reported Lanza & Baucina, a London-based group that planned George and Amal Clooney's 2014 wedding in Venice, was hired by the Bezoses. A representative for the group told the Journal its principles and the instructions of Bezos call for the 'minimizing of any disruption to the city, the respect for its residents and institutions and the overwhelming employment of locals in the crafting of the events.' The 2014 wedding had a generally positive perception, with locals lauding Clooney for his consideration and respect for Venice. Cassará even compared Bezos to Clooney in his statement, saying Bezos 'is not George Clooney with his romantic aura.'
We estimate Bezos' net worth at $237 billion as of Friday, making him the fourth-wealthiest person in the world behind Mark Zuckerberg ($253.1 billion), Larry Ellison ($253.4 billion) and Elon Musk ($409.8 billion). Key Background
The Bezoses met almost 10 years ago and began making public appearances together around 2019, when the two began dating. They became engaged in 2023 aboard the Koru superyacht, with Jeff offering Lauren a 30-carat cushion cut pink diamond set in platinum, according to Vanity Fair.
Venice Residents Protest Entry Fee For Tourists Amid Concerns City Will Turn Into A 'Theme Park' (Forbes)

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Orlando Bloom Is Finally Done Hiding Struggles With Katy Perry And Feels 'Normal' Again
Orlando Bloom Is Finally Done Hiding Struggles With Katy Perry And Feels 'Normal' Again

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Orlando Bloom Is Finally Done Hiding Struggles With Katy Perry And Feels 'Normal' Again

After months of quiet tension, Orlando Bloom and Katy Perry have officially gone their separate ways. While the split may not surprise insiders, Bloom's recent behavior suggests a man relieved to finally live on his own terms. The actor is in Venice, partaking in Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez's wedding festivities and has enjoyed himself throughout. Bloom is reportedly embracing his return to self after enduring months of emotional strain in his relationship with Katy Perry. According to a source close to the actor, Bloom is feeling like his 'normal self' again. The couple had faced mounting tension, and, despite several make-or-break moments over the years, this time appears to be the final one. 'They had broken up before and in the following years things could get tense and to a point where it was often make or break, and they would choose to make up,' the insider revealed to the Daily Mail. 'But shortly after her Video Vanguard Award and performance in September, they started to disconnect more as she was getting ready to release music, go on tour and take the space flight.' After the holidays, things deteriorated even further. 'It was just one little thing after another,' the source added. The couple was last seen together in March at the Vanity Fair Oscars party, and weeks of rumors culminated in the confirmation of their breakup. Behind the scenes, Perry and Bloom had started drifting apart by the end of 2024. 'After the holidays and into the New Year, it became easier to live their individual lives instead of a life together,' the insider explained. While they've reconciled in the past, sources say there's no chance of another reunion. 'He isn't going to try to get her back. It's over and he has accepted it,' a source shared. Bloom and Perry got engaged on Valentine's Day in 2019 after first connecting over In-N-Out burgers in 2016. They welcomed their daughter, Daisy Dove, in 2020, and planned a wedding in Japan later that year. However, COVID-19 threw everything off course, and work commitments eventually overshadowed those plans. Bloom hinted at their struggles during an interview with Trevor Noah in April 2024. 'She definitely demands that I evolve and I feel I do the same for her,' he shared. 'That makes for fireworks, pardon the pun, but it also makes for a lot of fun and a lot of growth.' He added, 'I wouldn't change it for anything even when sometimes it feels like 'how do we do this', because we've got these two giant careers and lives and hers… it's like a universe sometimes.' Despite the breakup, both stars remain focused on their daughter Daisy. 'They are both relieved that they don't have to deal with a messy divorce as they both believe they can figure out how to handle co-parenting,' a source said. 'Right now they need their space, but they will both figure out what is best for Daisy.' Orlando Bloom has successfully co-parented before, with ex-wife Miranda Kerr, with whom he shares 14-year-old son Flynn. Kerr once described the "Lord of the Rings" star as a 'great dad,' and their split was notably amicable. In contrast, Katy Perry's previous marriage to Russell Brand ended abruptly, via text, minutes before she was set to perform on New Year's Eve in 2011. She later called Brand 'very controlling.' As Katy Perry continues her Lifetimes Tour in Australia, Orlando Bloom has been spotted enjoying himself in Venice at Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez's $20 million wedding celebration. The festivities have become a welcome distraction for Bloom, who reportedly feels a sense of relief now that he no longer has to 'hide' his relationship troubles. 'Bloom is not planning to lead a playboy lifestyle,' the insider said. 'He is happy to be out and about at Jeff's wedding. He just wants to live life. Be his normal self.' Still, the actor raised eyebrows after sharing a water taxi with a mystery brunette, having earlier greeted Kim Kardashian warmly and hung out with Tom Brady. Despite the speculation, sources close to Bloom insist he's not chasing headlines, just clarity.

Code names. Decoys. Secret dress fittings. Here's what goes into pulling off a celebrity wedding.
Code names. Decoys. Secret dress fittings. Here's what goes into pulling off a celebrity wedding.

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Code names. Decoys. Secret dress fittings. Here's what goes into pulling off a celebrity wedding.

While Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez's lavish Venice wedding — with its splashy prelude, including a foam party on his $500 million superyacht — has dominated headlines with big 'look at us' energy, not every famous couple wants to share the intimate moments of their 'I do's' with the world. In Hollywood, there's been a noticeable shift: A-listers are increasingly trading public spectacles for private ceremonies. Demi Lovato, Hailee Steinfeld, Kristen Stewart and Millie Bobby Brown are recent brides who managed to keep their weddings mostly under wraps until they were already a 'Mrs.' The approach allowed them space to enjoy the moment — and control over what, if anything, they shared publicly. Despite the Bezos blowout, event planner to the stars Sharon Sacks tells Yahoo that she's seen celebrity weddings move away from extravaganza toward intimacy. 'They've shifted from that over-the-top production to a smaller, intimate feeling affair,' the Sacks Productions founder says, noting a renewed focus on family and close friends. Also, 'timeless elegance' is in style more than ever, with brides embracing the 'beauty of vintage' and 'not looking for the ordinary.' Privacy remains of the utmost importance. In the nearly 40 years that Sacks — who has planned weddings for Kim Kardashian, Meghan Trainor, and Nick and Vanessa Lachey — has been running her business, she's developed her own playbook for keeping high-profile weddings under wraps, from hiring decoys to locking down airspace. 'We're their SWAT team,' Sacks says. 'You name it, we do it all.' But it takes a village to give a couple privacy on their big day. Sharon Sever, who's the head designer for bridal and evening couture fashion label Galia Lahav, tells Yahoo that he's personally flown gowns to A-list brides to ensure that nobody, especially the pesky paparazzi, steals a sneak peek. 'It is really about protecting the moment,' says Sever, who has made wedding dresses for Brown, Beyoncé, Simone Biles and Paris Hilton. 'A wedding gown is personal, even if the bride has millions of followers.' Sever collaborated closely with Stranger Things star Brown to design the gown for her 2024 wedding to Jake Bongiovi, son of Jon Bon Jovi, a process he calls unforgettable. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Millie Bobby Brown (@milliebobbybrown) 'Millie is the definition of today's modern bride — she's stylish, funny, emotional and knows what she wants without being overcontrolling, and that is a rare gift,' he says. 'We didn't do endless back-and-forth sketching. Her vibe was clear and loud to me. It had to be romantic, fresh and unexpected. She gave the vision, I translated it into fabric. It was less Say Yes to the Dress and more: Let's make it iconic.' At Brown's final dress fitting at Galia Lahav's New York City boutique, they realized she was being staked out by paparazzi, shooting through the shop window in hopes of stealing a snapshot and spoiling her selection. Brown, worried the photos would be splashed all over the internet, said on the Tonight Show that she changed into a decoy dress — one that looked the opposite of her selection — and made a show of pretending she had found her dress. It worked. 'Millie wanted to keep the gown a complete secret, and she knows how to play the game,' Sever says. 'The paparazzi were lurking, it was a couture spy movie, but we were all impressed by Millie, and the 'fake' dress got its own moment. What a performance.' Sever says that's all part of the job when you have a star-studded client list. 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''Well, you're going to need to get in the water,'' she recalls saying to the security team. "[They took out their own] boats and … were able to block them from getting the shot.' During her tenure, Sacks and her team have built a reputation for being trustworthy, and she runs a tight ship, including nondisclosure agreements. 'Being prepared on the backend and having … trusted relationships with vendors [is] paramount,' Sacks says. 'Many of our vendors don't know who they're working for. They're working for me. The day they start loading in, the staff still doesn't really know. They have to sign another disclosure the day of the event. That's when they know who they're working for. It's really keeping it tight.' Sometimes, it's the celebrity themselves who keeps things a secret — even from the designer. Sever didn't know he had created Beyoncé's vow renewal dress until after she wore it. 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When Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck were supposed to marry in 2003, they called off their wedding, saying that when they found themselves contemplating hiring three separate decoy brides at three different locations, they realized things had gotten out of hand. Today's celebrity brides want control not just over the guest list, venue and menu but also how the wedding news rolls out and how the photos are disseminated. In an era of social media oversharing and instant online opinions, curating the rollout is part of protecting the moment. When Demi Lovato married singer Jutes in May, they announced it with a splash after the ceremony, unveiling their stunning wedding photos exclusively in Vogue. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Demi Lovato (@ddlovato) That same month, Hailee Steinfeld quietly wed Josh Allen, but after a drone video leaked, she shared their photos and wedding story exclusively with her Beau Society newsletter subscribers. View this post on Instagram A post shared by B E A U S O C I E T Y (@beausociety) Kristen Stewart's bride, Dylan Meyer, took a similar approach, posting images of their intimate, low-key April wedding on Instagram only after a grainy paparazzi photo of the ceremony began to circulate. Millie Bobby Brown managed to marry twice — first in a small, family- and close friends-only ceremony, then at a larger celebration in Italy — all mostly out of the spotlight, then she dropped the photos of her big day, on her own terms, via social media. As for the next crop of celebrities walking down the aisle, there's big anticipation over Zendaya marrying Tom Holland, Selena Gomez exchanging vows with Benny Blanco and — potentially — Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce, and Rihanna and A$AP Rocky. 'If Rihanna decides to get married, I'm on my way with my iPad,' says Sever. Not to mention, with sealed lips. Because for a celebrity, a truly private moment, away from the world's eyes, cameras and chatter, is the rarest luxury of all.

Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez are one of the richest married couples. Here's how the ultrawealthy do prenups.
Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez are one of the richest married couples. Here's how the ultrawealthy do prenups.

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez are one of the richest married couples. Here's how the ultrawealthy do prenups.

With Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez now married, they're likely to have a complex prenup. Lawyers and wealth management experts outlined the prenup process for the superrich. Business control, property ownership, and trusts are just some of the questions prenups tackle. Hindsight is 20/20 — especially when hindsight is worth $38 billion. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and MacKenzie Scott, his first wife, got married without a prenup (in 1993, before Bezos started Amazon). Scott received roughly $38 billion in Amazon shares in the settlement, making her one of the world's richest women. On Friday, Bezos got married again, this time to helicopter pilot and former journalist Lauren Sánchez. Experts in family law and wealth management told Business Insider that the couple is almost certain to have a complex prenup. Bezos is, after all, worth more than $200 billion today. A representative for Bezos didn't respond to a request for comment from BI about whether the couple has a prenup. Anne Paape, the managing director and head of wealth strategy at Cresset Capital, a multi-family office for entrepreneurs and multi-generational families of wealth, said prenups are generally becoming more common and are sometimes even mandated in family trusts for the ultrawealthy. Prenups begin with both people fully disclosing their financial assets and debts, she said. Besides family, they can also involve everyone from business partners and tax attorneys to luxury realtors and aviation experts who help appraise homes and private jets, said Brooke Summerhill, a divorce financial consultant who primarily works with ultra-high net worth clients. "It's not the clients making a lot of these decisions, it's their team helping them understand what those decisions are and making those decisions with them," she told BI. Paape doesn't know the details of Bezos' potential prenup but said his situation isn't entirely unique: Many superrich weddings mark second or third marriages for at least one spouse, often one whose assets have changed considerably since their first time tying the knot. "He will absolutely have protection against anything that he could," Summerhill said, adding that he likely won't let his pre-marriage assets co-mingle with Sánchez's assets. The more money you have, the more potential prenup headaches you'll have, especially when it comes to business interests and properties. Wealthy clients tend to have properties and business interests around the globe, making it harder to ensure compliance with divorce and death laws in various jurisdictions. Many entrepreneurs like Bezos are focused on insulating their businesses in the event of a divorce or death. Most don't want to risk giving an ex-partner enough stock to have a say in how the company runs, Paape told BI. "You could try to compensate for keeping that off the table," Paape said. "What else if you were to get divorced? What other resources could you provide to that person?" Clauses safeguarding the appreciation of assets during a marriage are also key for wealthy clients, Summerhill said. If the couple ever divorces, it's not unlikely that Sánchez would get a lump sum, Amazon shares, and some real estate, according to Summerhill and Raymond Hekmat, a family law attorney in Beverly Hills who primarily writes prenups. But a marriage can also end in death, and that's where a death clause can come in. As Summerhill put it, this "prevents the surviving spouse from claiming a bigger portion of that deceased person's separate property." A surviving spouse commonly receives a lump sum or life insurance payout upon their spouse's death, she said, but a last will and testament may take precedent over the prenup. Prenups for the ultrawealthy have repercussions beyond the couple, whether it's about who takes over the family empire or gets the keys to the Hamptons home. "There's more people that care about the resolution of that breakup, whether it's divorce or death," Paape said. "It's business partners, it's employees, it's charities you support, it's children and grandchildren." She said trusts "are a no-brainer " for children of the ultrarich and that many provisions deal with inherited property or business ownership. Bezos shares four children with Scott, and Sánchez has three kids. Hekmat said all the prenups he draws up have a confidentiality provision, and some can include social media restrictions. "In the event of a breakup, you can't disparage the other party or discuss the prenup in any way with the public, and there could be penalties involved," he said. Prenups can also include sunset clauses, which say that some provisions or even the full agreement expires after a certain period of time. Some people may choose to change certain provisions and become more generous after they've been with their spouse for a while, Paape said. Hekmat said that even with prenups, couples risk messy legal and financial fights down the line. Proclaimed love and devotion aside, he kept his advice for the Bezoses of the world simple. "My bottom line for billionaires is don't get married." Have a tip or a story to share about your own experiences with a prenup? Contact these reporters via email at atecotzky@ or sjackson@ or on Signal at alicetecotzky.05. Use a personal email address and a nonwork device; here's our guide to sharing information securely. Read the original article on Business Insider

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