Ben Stiller, Christine Taylor enjoy US Open date after reconciliation
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Ben Stiller and Christine Taylor enjoy US Open date night after reconciliation

Ben Stiller and Christine Taylor are still a “match.”

The “Zoolander” co-stars were all smiles at a US Open date night six months after revealing their reconciliation.

The couple, who wed in 2000, sat in the stands of Arthur Ashe Stadium on Tuesday during Rafael Nadal’s match against Rinky Hijikata.

When the actor, 56, and his 51-year-old wife appeared on the Jumbotron, they grinned and waved at the camera.

The duo share two children — daughter Ella, 20, and son Quinlin, 17 — but didn’t bring them to the sporting event.

The “Dodgeball” co-stars have previously attended the US Open together, sitting side by side in 2017 and seating Ella between them the following year.

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Ben Stiller and Christine Taylor
The duo were all smiles at the sporting event.GC Images
Ben Stiller and Christine Taylor
The duo were all smiles at the sporting event.GC Images
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Ben Stiller and Christine Taylor
The duo were all smiles at the sporting event.GC Images
Ben Stiller and Christine Taylor
The duo were all smiles at the sporting event.GC Images
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Stiller and Taylor notably called it quits in 2017, but they rekindled their romance while quarantining together amid the coronavirus pandemic.

“We were separated and got back together and we’re happy about that,” the “Severance” director explained to Esquire in February.

Ben Stiller and Christine Taylor
The couple split in 2017 but revealed their reconciliation earlier this year. GC Images

“It’s been really wonderful for all of us,” Stiller continued at the time, calling their reunion “unexpected and one of the things that came out of the pandemic.” 

In the same profile, the comedian admitted that his daughter had called him out for not “being there” during her childhood as he focused on his career.

Ben Stiller, Christine Taylor and daughter Ella
Stiller and Taylor are the parents of daughter Ella and son Quinlin. Getty Images

“She’s pretty articulate about it, and sometimes it’s stuff that I don’t want to hear. It’s hard to hear,” the Emmy winner said. “Because it’s me not being there in the ways that I saw my parents not being there.

“I had always thought, ‘Well, I won’t do that,'” he added.

While her admission “didn’t feel great,” he called it “important to acknowledge.”

Stiller noted that Ella and her brother were never “keeping score” of his work and, instead, wanted their dad to be “emotionally present and supportive.”