Joan Cusack’s return to the red carpet on May 28, 2026, felt less like a comeback and more like a reminder of what Hollywood had been missing. At 63, the beloved actress appeared at the London premiere of Toy Story 5 beside her husband, Richard Burke, marking her first major red-carpet appearance in 11 years.
For more than a decade, Cusack had quietly stepped away from the public spotlight. While many assumed she had retired, those close to her understood the choice differently. She had not disappeared because Hollywood forgot her. She had stepped back because family, peace, and a life outside the industry mattered more.
Burke, her husband of more than three decades, has long been part of that grounded world. During her years away from flashing cameras and industry events, Cusack focused on her family and on Judy Maxwell Home, the quirky Chicago gift shop she opened in 2011. The store reflected the same offbeat charm that made audiences fall in love with her performances: warm, unusual, funny, and unmistakably personal.
Her absence from public events only deepened the affection fans held for her. Cusack was never the kind of star who seemed desperate for attention. From Working Girl to In & Out, from School of Rock to Shameless, she built a career on originality rather than spectacle. Her voice, timing, and eccentric energy made her unforgettable, even when she was not chasing fame.
That is why Toy Story 5 carried special meaning. Reprising Jessie the Yodeling Cowgirl was not just another role. Jessie has become one of Pixar’s most beloved characters, a symbol of loyalty, courage, and emotional resilience. For Cusack, returning to voice Jessie offered a rare bridge between her private life and the public world she had left behind.
The film’s story, centered on toys facing the rise of modern electronics, adds another layer to her return. Jessie belongs to an older, more tactile kind of childhood imagination, much like Cusack herself represents an older Hollywood rhythm: less filtered, less manufactured, and more human.
As the franchise prepares for its June 19 release, Cusack’s appearance has already become one of the premiere’s most touching moments. She did not return with loud declarations or reinvention. She simply showed up, poised and familiar, beside the man who had witnessed her choice to prioritize home over Hollywood.
Joan Cusack’s 11-year absence was not an ending. It was a pause. And with Toy Story 5, she has reminded audiences that true stars do not need constant visibility to remain unforgettable.