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The Express Gazette
Thursday, January 1, 2026

Meryl Streep and Stanley Tucci Return as Miranda Priestly and Nigel in Devil Wears Prada 2, Front Row at Milan Fashion Week

Actors reprise iconic roles while filming the sequel; May 2026 release targets the 20th anniversary of the original

Culture & Entertainment 3 months ago
Meryl Streep and Stanley Tucci Return as Miranda Priestly and Nigel in Devil Wears Prada 2, Front Row at Milan Fashion Week

Meryl Streep and Stanley Tucci were spotted front row at the Dolce & Gabbana show in Milan on Saturday, as they filmed scenes for The Devil Wears Prada 2. The duo slipped back into their iconic on-screen personas, with Streep returning as Miranda Priestly, the formidable editor of Runway magazine, and Tucci reprising his fan-favorite role as Nigel. Eyebrows rose among attendees as the pair drew screams and selfies, just as their characters did two decades ago in the original film.

Streep arrived in a tan coat cinched with a leopard-print belt, paired with black tailored trousers and sky-high heels. She accessorized with a bold yellow pair of sunglasses and carried a matching leopard-print clutch, while her character’s famously sleek bob remained intact. Tucci followed closely, dressed in a blue three-piece suit with a patterned tie, dark shoes, and sunglasses, continuing the dynamic that fans associate with the Runway editor-in-chief’s trusted adviser.

The two actors were captured watching the Dolce & Gabbana collection from the front row as production crews continued work on the eagerly awaited sequel. While final plot specifics have been kept under wraps, reports indicate the narrative will track Miranda Priestly as she faces challenges tied to the survival of print media in a digital era, potentially forcing a reunion with her former assistant Emily—now a top executive at a luxury label—in a bid to land crucial advertising deals. Emily Blunt’s character, Emily Charlton, has long been speculated to play a pivotal role in the new film, though details remain closely guarded as filming progresses.

The Devil Wears Prada 2 arrives in theaters in May 2026, exactly 20 years after the first movie became a cultural touchstone. The original film, based on Lauren Weisberger’s 2003 novel, turned Streep’s Miranda Priestly into one of cinema’s most iconic villains and helped propel fashion into mainstream conversation. The film grossed about $326.7 million worldwide on a modest budget in the mid-range of $35 million to $41 million, and earned multiple nominations across major awards bodies, including Best Actress for Streep at the Academy Awards and multiple Golden Globes and BAFTAs. Its influence extended beyond the screen, fueling fashion trends and spawning a stage musical adaptation many years later.

David Frankel directed the first film, with Aline Brosh McKenna writing the screenplay; both are linked to the sequel in returning capacities, according to early reporting. The project is based on Weisberger’s novel, and the new installment is expected to revisit the franchise’s signature blend of high fashion, workplace politics, and character-driven drama. As the release approaches, fans and critics alike will be watching how the film balances nostalgia with new commentary about industry evolution and the pressures facing print media in an increasingly digital landscape. The cultural footprint of the original remains a benchmark for how fashion and cinema intersect, a benchmark the sequel aims to honor while charting its own course.

The public response to Streep and Tucci’s on-set appearance underscores the enduring appeal of Miranda Priestly and Nigel, two characters whose presence on screen sparked widespread dialogue about power, taste, and the fashion world. With the May 2026 date approaching, audiences will have their first extended look at how the sequel expands the story beyond the 2006 film’s boundaries, and whether the return of Priestly will once again reshape perceptions of fashion’s role in storytelling.


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