and her husband are rarely seen with all three of their children.
But that all changed on Monday when their eldest kid, 21-year-old James, posted a photo of himself, star Jessica, 58, his famous dad Matthew, 61, and his sisters, 14-year-old twins Marion and Tabitha.
The family were snuggled up in bed in the fun snap, which was part of a carousel of Instagram photos shared by James.
James captioned his post: ‘Cheers, California’ and other snaps showed him enjoying a basketball game and some mouth-watering food.
Sarah and Matthew tied the knot in 1997, around six years after they first met.
Despite being two of the biggest names in Hollywood, Matthew and Sarah have kept much of their marriage firmly behind closed doors.
They welcomed James in 2002 and their twins in 2009 via surrogate.
James is currently studying at Brown University.
He turned 20 last year, a milestone doting mum Jessica marked with a touching social media tribute.
She wrote in October 2022: ‘20 years ago today … the plates shifted.
‘All the feelings I had ever known, deeper, magnified and in brilliant new colours.’
The A-lister added: ‘Today the kaleidoscope spins with all the memories. In all the glorious shapes, changes and perspectives you have brought to our lives.
‘Happy birthday my son. I love you so.’
Speaking in 2020, doting dad Matthew dished on .
Speaking on Bruce Springsteen’s Sirius XM show that year, he shared: ‘I don’t know the secret at all, but I’m very grateful and I love her. It’s amazing.‘I mean, I can’t believe that it’s been that long. It doesn’t feel like it.’
Meanwhile, chatting about their bond in a 2019 interview with , Sarah credited their strong marriage to privacy.
‘We have a family, we have children, we have friends that have passed away, we have relationships,’ she told the publication. ‘We don’t talk about it – that’s how it stays strong.
‘We didn’t think of fame or money because, honestly, money was never part of the dream. It was to work in theatre, to be around those people whose work I was in total awe of.
‘I never saw the trappings; nobody talked about being a celebrity.’