Actor Ryan Reynolds Says Happy to Be A 'Girl Dad'

Actor Ryan Reynolds kisses his daughter Ines while posing by
his star with his actor wife Blake Lively and their daughter James on
the Hollywood Walk of Fame. MARIO ANZUONI/REUTERS
Actor Ryan Reynolds kisses his daughter Ines while posing by his star with his actor wife Blake Lively and their daughter James on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. MARIO ANZUONI/REUTERS
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Actor Ryan Reynolds Says Happy to Be A 'Girl Dad'

Actor Ryan Reynolds kisses his daughter Ines while posing by
his star with his actor wife Blake Lively and their daughter James on
the Hollywood Walk of Fame. MARIO ANZUONI/REUTERS
Actor Ryan Reynolds kisses his daughter Ines while posing by his star with his actor wife Blake Lively and their daughter James on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. MARIO ANZUONI/REUTERS

Ryan Reynolds has mostly kept his family life with wife Blake Lively and their three daughters private.

But the Golden Globe nominee doesn't hesitate to express his love for his four favorite girls, the Daily Mail reported.

He recently admitted he 'never in a million years would've imagined' being a father to three girls, as he gushed about Lively and their daughters to Access Hollywood.

The 44-year-old actor said: "They're like the most capable people I know. If anything got crazy or scary in my life, they're the first people I would lean on because they have wisdom and strength and they're calm under fire."

"I love being a girl dad. I have three daughters, which I never would've imagined. I come from all boys. I have three older brothers — I'm the youngest of four boys," he added.

Reynolds also revealed how he and Lively, 33, prioritize their family.

"I try to be as present as possible. We don't split up. Like I shoot movies and my wife shoots movies, and we go travel all over the place and we just all go together."

He and Lively tied the knot in September of 2012, after meeting on the set of their 2011 superhero flick Green Lantern. They welcomed daughters James, five, in December of 2014, and Inez, four, in September of 2016.

The couple most recently announced the birth of baby Betty, one, in October, 2019.



'Avatar' and 'Star Wars' Films Revealed at Disney Event

Every two years, thousands flock to a California convention center, dressed as their favorite Disney princesses and heroes, for D23. Patrick T. FALLON / AFP/File
Every two years, thousands flock to a California convention center, dressed as their favorite Disney princesses and heroes, for D23. Patrick T. FALLON / AFP/File
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'Avatar' and 'Star Wars' Films Revealed at Disney Event

Every two years, thousands flock to a California convention center, dressed as their favorite Disney princesses and heroes, for D23. Patrick T. FALLON / AFP/File
Every two years, thousands flock to a California convention center, dressed as their favorite Disney princesses and heroes, for D23. Patrick T. FALLON / AFP/File

Disney lifted the lid on "Avatar: Fire and Ash" and presented new footage from "Star Wars" and Pixar movies at a giant showcase in front of 12,000 fans in California on Friday.
"Avatar" director James Cameron took the stage at the company's biennial D23 fan gathering to announce the name of the latest installment of his sci-fi franchise, due out December 2025, said AFP.
"The new film is not what you expect. But it's definitely what you want," teased Cameron of his third visit to Pandora.
The previous two "Avatar" films are the highest and third-highest grossing movies of all time, earning $5.2 billion combined.
Images from the new movie, currently in production in New Zealand, showed its blue Na'vi characters dancing around a campfire, as well as images of giant floating ships and flying beasts.
The director promised higher emotional stakes, and "new cultures and settings and creatures and new biomes."
"You'll see a lot more Pandora, the planet, that you never saw before," he said.
The fourth and fifth "Avatar" films are scheduled for 2029 and 2031.
Also in Friday's presentation, Disney fans saw a first glimpse of "The Mandalorian and Grogu."
Out in May 2026, it will be the first "Star Wars" film since 2019's divisive "The Rise of Skywalker."
Disney, which had been churning out a new "Star Wars" film every year to that point, dramatically slammed the brakes in the face of diminishing box office returns.
"We're putting 'Star Wars' back on the big screen,'" said Dave Filoni, producer of the new movie -- which is spun off from streaming series "The Mandalorian," and will feature its beloved Baby Yoda.
Footage showed the cutesy creature and his mercenary friend speeding around a snowy planet.
On the television side, Jude Law plays a Jedi in "Skeleton Crew," streaming in December.
The kid-centric show is "in the spirit of... coming-of-age films of the '80s like 'The Goonies' and 'E.T.,'" promised Law.
'Who else?'
The giant D23 fan gathering caters to and showcases the obsessive loyalty of Disney's most die-hard devotees.
Every two years, thousands flock to a California convention center, dressed as their favorite princesses and heroes.
Tickets -- ranging from $80 to an eye-watering $2,600 VIP pass -- allow attendees to spend yet more money on rare merchandise, and watch starry presentations unveiling new films, shows and theme park rides.
"Who else but Disney could pull off a weekend like D23, right?" CEO Bob Iger asked the packed crowd at Anaheim's NHL professional ice hockey arena, to cheers.
Seconds later, the suited executive was replaced on stage by a troupe of hula-ing Polynesian dancers and Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, promoting "Moana 2."
But beneath the euphoria, Friday night's presentation of new movies and TV shows comes at a key time for Disney.
The company's Pixar and Marvel franchises have suffered uncharacteristically poor runs in recent years, with high-profile flops like "Lightyear" and "The Marvels."
Disney's stock price remains well below half its 2021 peak. Rounds of cost-cutting have seen thousands of jobs cut since last year, mirroring trends across Hollywood.
This summer has brought welcome relief, with monster hits "Deadpool & Wolverine," and "Inside Out 2" -- already the biggest animated film of all time.
'Toy meets tech'
Pixar on Friday announced "Hoppers," a new animated movie about a young girl who can "hop" her brain into a robotic beaver.
Out in spring 2026, it will follow her undercover adventures into the animal world, where she befriends a "regal beaver" called King George, and helps battle an evil mayor voiced by Jon Hamm.
And Pixar's "Toy Story 5," out a few months later, will see the beloved toys vie with electronic devices like phones and tablets for children's attention.
"This time around, it's toy meets tech," said director Andrew Stanton.