Originally appeared on E! Online

    Since Bobby Cannavale does, indeed, have legs, he might just be kicking himself for missing partner Rose Byrne’s win for Best Female Actor – Musical/Comedy at the 2026 Golden Globes Jan. 11.

    Though the reason for his absence is rather, uh, wild.

    “I want to thank my husband, Bobby Cannavale,” the If I Had Legs, I’d Kick You star said while accepting her trophy at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. “He couldn’t be here because we’re getting a bearded dragon, and he went to a reptile expo in New Jersey.”

    It was a plan hatched by their sons Rocco, 9, and Rafael, 8.

    “He can’t come, which is such a bummer,” the actress said on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon ahead of the Nikki Glaser-hosted ceremony, explaining why brother George Byrne would serve as her plus-one. The expo “is the place to go,” she detailed, noting it’d be a “parent fail” if they didn’t follow through on their promise.

    And speaking of vows, the two have taken to using the terms husband and wife rather colloquially some 14 years into their romance, and a decade after Byrne began wearing a rather sparkly ring on her left hand.

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    “I hate all the other words! It’s just easier to say ‘husband and wife,'” Cannavale explained to Vulture in January 2020. “‘Boyfriend and girlfriend’ feels so young. ‘Partner’ feels so sterile.”

    Though Byrne wasn’t totally opposed to one unstuffy suggestion, joking, “My lover, Bobby.”

    They’d been planning to wed, she noted, “and then another baby, and then—”

    Bottom line, Cannavale summed up, “Who gives a s–t. It’s just funny what people care about.”

    And though the Cuban-Italian New Jersey native and the Australian actress would describe themselves as decidedly private—”It’s way more interesting for other people than it is for us,” he told Vulture of their romance—fans have been invested in their journey from the beginning.

    Rose Byrne, Bobby Cannavale, The Late Show

    Scott Kowalchyk/CBS

    Introduced by mutual friends in 2012 when Byrne, now 46, was wrapping her five-season run in the legal psychodrama Damages, “the chemistry between them, it’s just so remarkable,” her costar Glenn Close told Vanity Fair in 2019. Not to mention, “they’re both kind of universally loved.”

    Soon they were teaming up for both business and pleasure, playing a married couple in the 2014 indie Adult Beginners, co-starring in a remake of Annie that same year, portraying villains in 2015 comedy Spy and finally taking to the stage mere blocks from their house in Brooklyn’s Boerum Hill for Simon Stone’s adaption of Euripides’ tragedy Medea.

    Despite the dicey material, the two maintain a burning desire to play off one another more frequently.

    “It’s hard,” Byrne told Vulture of finding the right opportunities. “You have two parents not putting kids to bed. That’s the biggest part of the decision.”

    But when it works…

    At this point, “We’ve worked together in TV and film,” the 55-year-old told Us Weekly in October of making a cameo on her Apple TV+ series Platonic. “We have done a play together and we’ve made commercials together. It’s nice and it’s unusual to get to go to work together in any capacity—in any profession. We’re parents of small children and it’s nice to be able to go to work together and the kids know where we are. We’re together. It’s good and just a family band.”

    Though, admittedly, there are times they’re not convinced everyone in their household is in perfect harmony.

    “We hear them talking about us in the room,” Cannavale—also dad to actor Jake Cannavale with ex-wife Jenny Lumet—revealed to Stephen Colbert during a January 2020 appearance on The Late Show. “Like, in the morning before we come in. You know, the 4-year-old helps the 2-year-old out of the sleep sack so he can climb out of the crib. He pulls him out.”

    Rose Byrne arrives at the Golden Globe Awards 2026 red carpet

    David Fisher/Shutterstock

    In other words, “They’re conspiring,” he continued. “And it sounds like they’re upset about something.”

    Their eldest is “very sensitive,” Cannavale added, while his little brother has earned the nickname Seal Team 6 “because he’s crazy and he’s a killer.”

    A particularly brute one at that.

    After a stint in Toronto, where Byrne was portraying Gloria Steinem in the FX miniseries Mrs. America, the family was packing for their return to NYC “and we had this big moving box,” Cannavale detailed. Rocco climbed in and attempted to keep his brother out, “So, Rafa grabbed him by the hair and he pulled him down with the box. Pulled him out by the hair and crawled in.”

    Theirs is a particularly ordinary existence, with Cannavale taking on the role of family planner while Byrne is “a little bit more moment to moment,” she admitted to Vulture. “That’s why we’re a good yin and yang.”

    But they have no issue acting as unmistakably dysfunctional couples.

    Bobby Cannavale, Rose Byrne, MET Gala 2016, Inside Party Pics, Exclusive

    Joe Schildhorn/BFA/REX/Shutterstock

    Because no doubt, the Emmy winner is her favorite co-star.

    “He is one of a kind, man!” she gushed to In Style in 2017. “He’s endlessly interesting and entertaining. When something is special, it’s hard to articulate it, but I feel really lucky.”

    Same, same for Cannavale.

    “Rose is my favorite actor on the planet,” he stressed to Us Weekly. “I’m always surprised and amazed at her work. The different qualities that she brings to all these characters—I never see her the same way twice. I would like to show up for her—unequivocally—for anything that she’s a part of.”

    You know, as long as there’s not a bearded dragon to fetch.

    “It’s going well,” Byrne told Extra after scooping up her trophy. “We’ve got the guy. He’s really cute and he’s in the house.”

    “Bobby is doing God’s work,” she added. “This is easy.”

    Of course, Byrne wasn’t the only one to walk away from the Golden Globes as a winner. Check out the full list of victors below.

    Best Male Actor – Television – Musical/Comedy

    <p>Best Male Actor &ndash; Television &ndash; Musical/Comedy</p>

    Adam Brody—Nobody Wants This

    Steve Martin—Only Murders in the Building

    Glen Powell—Chad Powers

    WINNER: Seth Rogen—The Studio

    Martin Short—Only Murders in the Building

    Jeremy Allen White—The Bear

    Best Male Actor – Motion Picture – Musical/Comedy

    <p>Best Male Actor &ndash; Motion Picture &ndash; Musical/Comedy</p>

    WINNER: Timothee Chalamet—Marty Supreme

    George Clooney—Jay Kelly

    Leonardo DiCaprio—One Battle After Another

    Ethan Hawke—Blue Moon

    Lee Byung-Hun—No Other Choice

    Jesse Plemons—Bugonia

    Best Female Actor – Television – Drama

    <p>Best Female Actor &ndash; Television &ndash; Drama</p>

    Kathy Bates—Matlock

    Britt Lower—Severance

    Helen Mirran—Mobland

    Bella Ramsey—The Last of Us

    Keri Russell—The Diplomat

    WINNER: Rhea Seehorn—Pluribus

    Best Male Actor – Motion Picture – Drama

    <p>Best Male Actor &ndash; Motion Picture &ndash; Drama</p>

    Joel Edgerton—Train Dreams

    Oscar Isaac—Frankenstein

    Dwayne Johnson—The Smashing Machine

    Michael B. Jordan—Sinners

    WINNER: Wagner Moura—The Secret Agent

    Jeremy Allen White—Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere

    Best Female Actor – Motion Picture – Drama

    <p>Best Female Actor &ndash; Motion Picture &ndash; Drama</p>

    WINNER: Jessie Buckley—Hamnet

    Jennifer Lawrence—Die My Love

    Renate Reinsve—Sentimental Value

    Julia Roberts—After the Hunt

    Tessa Thompson—Hedda

    Eva Victor—Sorry, Baby

    Best Picture – Musical or Comedy

    <p>Best Picture &ndash; Musical or Comedy</p>

    Marty Supreme

    Bugonia

    Blue Moon

    No Other Choice

    Nouvelle Vague

    WINNER: One Battle After Another

    Best Female Actor – Television – Musical/Comedy

    <p>Best Female Actor &ndash; Television &ndash; Musical/Comedy</p>

    Kristen Bell—Nobody Wants This

    Ayo Edebiri—The Bear

    Natasha Lyonne—Poker Face

    Selena Gomez—Only Murders in the Building

    Jenna Ortega—Wednesday

    WINNER: Jean Smart—Hacks

    Best Picture—Drama

    <p>Best Picture&mdash;Drama</p>

    Sentimental Value

    WINNER: Hamnet

    Frankenstein

    It Was Just an Accident

    The Secret Agent

    Sentimental Value

    Sinners

    Best Drama Series—Television

    <p>Best Drama Series&mdash;Television</p>

    The Diplomat

    WINNER: The Pitt

    Pluribus

    Severance

    Slow Horses

    The White Lotus

    Best Male Actor – Television – Limited Series, Anthology Series or Television Motion Picture

    <p>Best Male Actor &ndash; Television &ndash; Limited Series, Anthology Series or Television Motion Picture</p>

    Jacob Elordi—The Narrow Road to the Deep North

    Paul Giamatti—Black Mirror

    WINNER: Stephen Graham—Adolescence

    Charlie Hunnam—Monster: The Ed Gein Story

    Jude Law—Black Rabbit

    Matthew Rhys—The Beast in Me

    Best Supporting Female Actor – Television

    <p>Best Supporting Female Actor &ndash; Television</p>

    WINNER: Erin Doherty—Adolescence

    Carrie Coon—The White Lotus

    Hannah Einbender—Hacks

    Catherine O’Hara—The Studio

    Parker Posey—The White Lotus

    Aimee Lou Wood—The White Lotus

    Best Supporting Male Actor—Motion Picture

    <p>Best Supporting Male Actor&mdash;Motion Picture</p>

    Benecio del Toro—One Battle After Another

    Jacob Elordi—Frankenstein

    Paul Mescal—Hamnet

    Sean Penn—One Battle After Another

    Adam Sandler—Jay Kelly

    WINNER: Stellan Skarsgard—Sentimental Value

    Best Performance by an Actor In A Television Series – Drama

    <p>Best Performance by an Actor In A Television Series - Drama</p>

    Sterling K. Brown—Paradise

    Diego Luna—Andor

    Gary Oldman—Slow Horses

    Mark Ruffalo—Task

    Adam Scott—Severance

    WINNER: Noah Wyle—The Pitt

    Best Supporting Male Actor – Television

    <p>Best Supporting Male Actor &ndash; Television</p>

    WINNER: Owen Cooper—Adolescence

    Billy Crudup—The Morning Show

    Walton Goggins—The White Lotus

    Jason Isaacs—The White Lotus

    Tramell Tillman—Severance

    Ashley Waters—Adolescence

    Best Original Song—Motion Picture

    <p>Best Original Song&mdash;Motion Picture</p>

    “Dream as One”—Avatar: Fire and Ash; Miley Cyrus, Andrew Wyatt, Mark Ronson, Simon Franglen

    WINNER: “Golden”—K:Pop Demon Hunters; Joong Gyu Kwak, Yu Han Lee, Hee Dong Nam, Jeong Hoon Seo, Park Hong Jun, Kim Eun-jae (EJAE), Mark Sonnenblick

    “I Lied to You”—Sinners; Raphael Saadiq, Ludwig Göransson

    “No Place Like Home”—Wicked: For Good; Stephen Schwartz

    “The Girl in the Bubble”—Wicked: For Good; Stephen Scwartz

    “Train Dreams”—Train Dreams; Nick Cave, Bryce Dessner

    Best Limited Series, Anthology Series or Television Motion Picture

    <p>Best Limited Series, Anthology Series or Television Motion Picture</p>

    WINNER: Adolescence

    All Her Fault

    The Beast in Me

    Black Mirror

    Dying for Sex

    The Girlfriend

    Best Female Actor – Motion Picture – Musical/Comedy

    <p>Best Female Actor &ndash; Motion Picture &ndash; Musical/Comedy</p>

    WINNER: Rose Byrne—If I Had Legs, I’d Kick You

    Cynthia Erivo—Wicked: For Good

    Kate Hudson—Song Sung Blue

    Chase Infiniti—One Battle After Another

    Amanda Seyfried—The Testament of Ann Lee

    Emma Stone—Bugonia

    Best Female Actor – Television – Limited Series, Anthology Series or Television Motion Picture

    <p>Best Female Actor &ndash; Television &ndash; Limited Series, Anthology Series or Television Motion Picture</p>

    Claire Danes—The Beast in Me

    Rashida Jones—Black Mirror

    Amanda Seyfried—Long Bright River

    Sarah Snook—All Her Fault

    WINNER: Michelle Williams—Dying for Sex

    Robin Wright—The Girlfriend

    Best Supporting Female Actor – Motion Picture

    <p>Best Supporting Female Actor &ndash; Motion Picture</p>

    Emily Blunt—The Smashing Machine

    Elle Fanning—Sentimental Value

    Ariana Grande—Wicked: For Good

    Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas—Sentimental Value

    Amy Madigan—Weapons

    WINNER: Teyana Taylor—One Battle After Another

    Best Cinematic and Box Office Achievement

    <p>Best Cinematic and Box Office Achievement</p>

    Avatar: Fire and Ash

    F1

    KPop Demon Hunters

    Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning

    WINNER: Sinners

    Weapons

    Wicked: For Good

    Zootopia 2

    Best Animated Motion Picture

    <p>Best Animated Motion Picture</p>

    Arco

    Demon Slayer: Kimestu No Yaiba Infinity Castle

    Elio

    Little Amelie or The Character of the Rain

    WINNER: KPop Demon Hunters

    Zootopia 2

    Best Musical or Comedy Series—Television

    <p>Best Musical or Comedy Series&mdash;Television</p>

    Abbott Elementary

    The Bear

    Hacks

    Nobody Wants This

    Only Murders in the Building

    WINNER: The Studio

    Best Director – Motion Picture

    <p>Best Director - Motion Picture</p>

    WINNER: Paul Thomas Anderson—One Battle After Another

    Ryan Coogler—Sinners

    Guillermo del Toro—Frankenstein

    Jafar Panahi—It Was an Accident

    Joachim Trier—Sentimental Value

    Chloe Zhao—Hamnet

    Best Screenplay – Motion Picture

    <p>Best Screenplay - Motion Picture</p>

    WINNER: One Battle After Another—Paul Thomas Anderson

    Marty Supreme—Josh Safdie, Ronald Bronstein

    Sinners—Ryan Coogler

    It Was Just an Accident—Jafar Panahi

    Sentimental Value—Eskil Vogt, Joachim Trier

    Hamnet—Chloe Zhao, Maggie O’ Farrell

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