In the world of child superstardom, Emma Watson is often cited as the gold standard for staying grounded. But according to the Harry Potter alum, her poise wasn’t magic—it was the result of a very specific, “serious” upbringing by her parents, Chris Watson and Jacqueline Luesby.
Born in Paris in , Watson was thrust into the global spotlight at just years old. While fans on TikTok and X (formerly Twitter) often reminisce about the “Golden Trio,” Watson recently highlighted a “key difference” between her experience and that of costars Daniel Radcliffe and Rupert Grint: she didn’t have a family member on set.
“My parents didn’t chaperone me,” Watson told GQ U.K., explaining that both of her parents were full-time lawyers. “I think that was a key difference between me and Dan and Rupert. I didn’t have my parents with me; I didn’t have a family member.”
Because her parents were divorced and busy with their own high-powered careers—and caring for her younger brother, Alex—Watson began traveling alone to film sets at a young age. “I was responsible for myself, and being responsible for myself, I knew I was my own backstop,” she noted.
Despite the distance, Watson insists her parents were her anchor. Speaking to Metro France, she shared, “Luckily they weren’t focused on my career. All that mattered to them was that I was happy.”
At home, the “Hermione” hype didn’t exist. To get attention at the dinner table, Watson says she had to provide “good conversation” or do well in school. Even her red-carpet glam was met with classic British understatement. “The biggest compliment I’ve ever had, getting ready for a premiere or whatever, is that I scrub up all right,” she joked.
Her father, Chris, also played a massive role in her fierce independence. Watson revealed that he “didn’t do kid stuff,” often treating her and Alex as equals. “You weren’t allowed to order off the kid’s menu at dinner,” she recalled. “We’d play tennis, and he’d smack the ball as hard at me as he did with anyone else.”
That sense of equality clearly stuck. In , Watson and her mother, Jacqueline, went viral when they were spotted holding hands and marching together at the Women’s March in Washington, D.C.
Today, the family bond remains strong through a new venture: wine and spirits. Chris, a longtime winemaker with an estate in Chablis, France, inspired Emma and Alex to launch their own gin brand, Renais, in .
As Watson told British Vogue, her identity as a daughter and sister is what keeps her stable. “There’s a whole existence and identity that I have… that has nothing to do with [my fame].”
Would you like to see the rare photos of Emma and her mom at the Women’s March or learn more about her brother Alex’s modeling career?
