If you’d asked anyone in Hollywood to bet on which marriage would last, you’d hear one name whispered with certainty: Hugh Jackman and Deborra-Lee Furness. But like a plot twist in a melodramatic musical, their nearly three-decade love story unraveled with Broadway-worthy scandal, heartbreak, and maybe—just maybe—a scandalous book deal.
Let’s call it “Les Misérables: The Marital Edition.”
From Fairytale to Farewell
They were the golden couple before “golden couple” meant anything. Hugh Jackman, the dashing Aussie who could sing, dance, and slice villains with adamantium claws, met Deborra-Lee on the set of an Australian TV show Correlli in 1995. She was the star, he was the newcomer. And, like any good rom-com, sparks flew instantly.
By 1996, they were married. The kind of marriage that made agents, stylists, and red carpet photographers swoon. They adopted two kids—Oscar and Ava—built homes in New York, Sydney, and the Hamptons, and managed to keep their family out of the chaos of celebrity. They were… normal. Or at least as normal as a couple with a $250 million empire and a Bondi beach house can be.
Then came the Instagram posts. You know the kind—overly sweet anniversary tributes that started to feel like a farewell letter in disguise. “Being married to you is as natural as breathing,” Hugh wrote in 2021. Sweet? Sure. But also… oddly final?
The Cracks Behind the Curtain
Fast forward to 2023. After a strangely distant appearance at the Met Gala (where fashion was louder than their body language), the bomb dropped: Hugh and Deb announced their separation. No fireworks. No mudslinging. Just a neat little joint statement about “individual growth.”
Publicly, Hugh kept up appearances. Backflips on Broadway (The Music Man), sun-drenched walks through Tribeca, even smiling selfies with fans. But privately? The story was just beginning.
Rumors trickled in—broad ones at first. “Growing apart.” “Different paths.” Then a sharper note: Broadway co-star Sutton Foster entered the chat.
Enter Stage Left: The Co-Star
Let’s set the stage. Hugh and Sutton starred together in The Music Man from 2021 to 2023. You know how Broadway gets. Long rehearsals. Stage chemistry. Matching sweat towels. By the time Sutton filed for divorce from her husband in late 2024, the theater crowd was already whispering.
Come early 2025, it wasn’t whispers—it was headlines. Hugh and Sutton were spotted holding hands in LA, then popping up in New York. Soon enough, she was seen entering (and not quickly leaving) Hugh’s Chelsea penthouse—the same one he once shared with Deb.
Coincidence? Please. Even the ushers at Shubert Theatre knew.
The Financial Opera: Mansions, Millions & “Misunderstandings”
Now, divorce in Hollywood is never just about love lost. It’s about real estate, residuals, and who gets the Art Deco bar cart. For Hugh and Deb, it meant disentangling nearly $300 million in combined assets.
At the heart of the split: their shared homes (Chelsea, Bondi Beach, East Hampton), investments, and residuals from Hugh’s movie and theater catalog. Reports suggest Hugh kept the Chelsea condo and Bondi house, while Deborra received a generous settlement—including lifelong spousal support.
But not everything went smoothly. There were, as one insider whispered, “financial misunderstandings.” Deb felt her contributions—especially in raising their children while Hugh took on Wolverine and Broadway—were undervalued. For a brief moment, things turned tense.
Then, in true Deborra fashion, she dropped the calm card and found a different weapon: the pen.
Scandal in Hardcover?
Sources close to Deborra say she’s writing a book. Not your average “my life in Hollywood” fluff, but something… juicier. A tell-all that reportedly “pulls no punches,” especially when it comes to Hugh’s emotional distance, the Sutton Foster timeline, and her own spiritual awakening after what she called “a profound betrayal.”
“She’s angry. She wants people to know what really happened,” a friend revealed. As of now, no publisher has confirmed a deal, but agents are circling. Think: Eat, Pray, Betray.
Honestly, who can blame her? If Sutton Foster moved into your penthouse, you might be calling Penguin Random House too.
Fallout & Front Rows
The public split has taken a toll—not just emotionally, but professionally. Hugh’s new one-man show, From New York, With Love, is reportedly struggling. Ticket prices have dropped dramatically. Some speculate the public’s perception of “Mr. Nice Guy” took a hit, especially after Sutton-gate broke wide open.
And yet, Hugh seems unfazed. He’s been spotted smiling, biking along the Hudson, even taking Sutton to cozy dinners in SoHo. (At one, he allegedly ordered two desserts—maybe stress-eating, or maybe just in love.)
Meanwhile, Deborra has leaned into self-care, art collecting, and yes, that rumored memoir.
Final Bow: Who Gets the Standing Ovation?
So where does that leave us?
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Hugh Jackman, 56, is still every bit the Broadway dreamboat—just with a slightly messier personal file.
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Deborra-Lee, 68, is stepping into her own spotlight, ready to reclaim the narrative.
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Sutton Foster, 50, may have found her leading man.
It’s a classic showbiz cocktail: love, heartbreak, luxury condos, and Broadway footlights. Add in a tell-all book, and we might be looking at a made-for-streaming docu-drama by 2026.
For now, we watch, we wait, and we remember: even Wolverine can get emotionally wounded.