Don't be absurd—everyone wants a glimpse of **The Devil Wears Prada 2**. As the 2026 Grammy Awards celebrated music's brightest stars on February 1st, movie buffs received their own special treat with a new trailer for the long-awaited sequel, featuring Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt, and Stanley Tucci returning to their roles.
In the preview for the film, set to hit theaters on May 1st, Andy Sachs (played by Anne) is no longer the timid assistant to fashion powerhouse Miranda Priestly (portrayed by Meryl). However, upon reuniting with her former employee, the Runway magazine editor-in-chief appeared to have a minor case of amnesia.
"Sorry, who is this?" she asked her confidant Nigel Kipling (Stanley) in the teaser. "Do you know her? Do I know her?"

Andy's former rival Emily Charlton (Emily) certainly recognized her but didn't miss an opportunity to throw a bit of shade.
"You know what's funny? You've changed. You're much more confident," Emily observed before adding, "Kept those eyebrows though, didn't you?"
Of course, fans aren't the only ones excited about the follow-up to the 2006 comedy. The cast was also eager to explore what their characters have been up to in the two decades since they were last onscreen.
"Everyone who was physically able to come back for the second film did, so we started with a deep knowledge and appreciation for the last 20 years and what the film has become," Hathaway told Vogue in an interview published on February 1st. "A new cast member described it as 'Gay Christmas.'"
The film also marks a special on-screen reunion for Emily and Stanley, who became in-laws in 2012 when the Lovely Bones actor married Emily's sister Felicity Blunt.
"It felt a lot like coming home, especially because Stanley Tucci is now... literally my home," Emily told the outlet of being on set. "It's incredible what this film has brought us all."
Meryl also shared in her castmates' joy to be back, with the three-time Oscar winner telling the publication, "It was like going into the back of your own closet and finding something, thinking, 'I wonder if this still fits?'"