Zendaya and Tom Holland have apparently skipped the spectacle entirely. The couple, both 29, are already married, according to Zendaya's longtime stylist Law Roach, who dropped the news casually on the 2026 SAG Actor Awards red carpet Sunday while speaking with Access Hollywood.
"The wedding has already happened. You missed it."
When pressed, Roach didn't walk it back. "It's very true," he said.
No public ceremony. No leaked venue photos. No exclusive magazine spread. Just a quiet marriage between two people who, by all appearances, decided their relationship was nobody else's business.
According to Page Six, Holland and Zendaya were first romantically linked in 2017 but didn't go public with their relationship until 2021. The engagement followed a similar pattern. Holland got down on one knee between Christmas and New Year's Eve 2024, after asking Zendaya's parents, Kazembe Ajamu Coleman and Claire Stoermer, for permission before he popped the question.
An insider told Page Six that many close to the couple "had no idea," though the two had "discussed marriage over the years." The source added that they both value their privacy and that the proposal was something Holland wanted to keep private.
Engagement rumors first surfaced at the 2025 Golden Globe Awards, after Zendaya was seen wearing a diamond ring on her left ring finger. Photos obtained by Page Six on Feb. 20 showed the "Dune" star wearing a gold band on her left ring finger, and marriage rumors swirled again last month when she stepped out in Beverly Hills with film producer Josh Lieberman wearing the same band. The 5-carat diamond sparkler, it seems, was just the opening act.
What's worth noting here isn't the marriage itself. Celebrity weddings happen constantly, and most of them are engineered for maximum public consumption. What's unusual is the restraint.
Last summer, Roach had revealed the couple hadn't even started wedding planning because of Zendaya's busy schedule. He told reporters at the time, "We have time. We have a lot of time." Either plans accelerated dramatically, or the couple had already decided that the wedding industry's idea of a proper timeline didn't apply to them.
In an era where every engagement gets a ring-cam video, every wedding gets a drone flyover, and every celebrity milestone is immediately monetized through brand partnerships and social media rollouts, Holland and Zendaya just got married. Quietly. Without permission from the public or the press.
There's something genuinely countercultural about that. Not countercultural in the way Hollywood usually means the word, which typically involves making a loud spectacle of rejecting norms while desperately seeking applause for doing so. Countercultural in the older, simpler sense: two people who decided that the most important commitment of their lives didn't need to be a content strategy.
Page Six has reached out to representatives for both Zendaya and Holland for comment, but neither has confirmed the news publicly. The only source remains Roach, who seemed entirely unbothered about letting the information slip at the 32nd Annual Actor Awards.
Whether Zendaya and Holland release a statement, post a photo, or simply let the silence speak for itself remains to be seen. Based on their track record, don't hold your breath for a tell-all.
Hollywood could learn something from the approach. Marriage is serious. Treating it that way, rather than as a branding opportunity, is a choice that says more than any red carpet interview ever could.
They got married. They didn't need you to watch.