Vanessa Hudgens Wore Vera Wang to Marry Cole Tucker in the Heart of the Mayan Jungle

Inside Vanessa Hudgens and Cole Tuckers Wedding in the Heart of the Mayan Jungle
Photo: Jorden DeGaetano

The actress was working nonstop on the latest film in the Bad Boys franchise at the time, but needed to fly to Tulum for a venue tour. “I was like you know what, even if it’s not that hotel, I’m sure I’ll find another hotel that might work,” she says. “I also knew I wanted to get married somewhere warm, and our window for getting married was so small because Cole’s [baseball] season is very long. I felt like ‘Mexico it is!’ I also wanted somewhere very spiritual. So I went to the hotel and got a really long tour, where I myself was not doing well, I was so hot and felt like I was going to faint. At the end of this very long tour, I was like ‘Where would we have our ceremony?’ and they were like ‘Oh, that would be at our museum’ and they said, ‘It’s 45 minutes into the jungle.’ I was thinking, ‘Okay, that sounds aggressive, but I guess I’ll give it a try.’”

She went deep into the jungle in search of the perfect ceremony spot. “A lot of it was down an unpaved dirt road, and I proceeded to think, ‘There’s no way in hell we’ll be able to have our wedding here—how are we going to get our entire party out here down this bumpy dirt road?’”

Once Vanessa pulled up to the museum and walked in, however, all of those doubts quickly disappeared. “I knew that it was our place,” she says. “I felt like I was transported to some kind of utopia, unlike anything I had ever been to before. It was whimsical and magical, and I just fell in love.”

The bride found her wedding planner—Pia Lindstrom—through her friend Alexander Ludwig, who she was working on Bad Boys with. “He was like, ‘Just give it a go, she’s great, I think you guys would hit it off, but if not, no worries,” Vanessa says. “She had done the after-party for Sleepy Hollow, and you know me and my obsession with all things spooky. We hit it off, and so I was like, ‘Cool, let’s rock ‘n’ roll!’”

For her wedding look, Vanessa wanted a dress that felt sleek, modern, and sexy, with a shape inspired by the ’90s supermodels. She ended up choosing a gown by Vera Wang—a light ivory chartreuse bias-cut cowl-neck slip dress with a plunging back. The veil was light ivory tulle with custom embroidery that read: “Mrs. T December 2nd, 2023” in a gothic font.

After sending her stylist Jason Bolden a ton of reference photos, the two went to visit Vera Wang’s New York atelier in person. Vanessa walked around the store and pulled a few of the dresses that she was drawn to—and ultimately, the dress that she wore for her ceremony was actually the first one she tried on. “I put it on, and I was like ‘It’s perfect. It’s easy, it’s simple, and it’s chic,” she says. “It was exactly what I wanted, but we obviously had to spruce it up a little and add some extra love to it so that it was special, just for me. I wanted it to look like I was floating and loved the cape and veil combo,” she says.

“Vera’s been an amazing friend and supporter of mine,” Vanessa says. “I’ve always felt so confident and sexy and feminine whenever I’m in her clothes. And so, I was like ‘You know, that’s the vibe…that’s what I want to be feeling like for my wedding day. She also has such an amazing resume of women that she’s dressed for the most important day of their lives, and I was like, ‘Who better to do it than a friend?’”

The bride also knew she wanted her veil to be a dramatic moment. “When I saw the cape, I thought I might as well try that on as well,” she says. “I love the whole ethereal bohemian vibe—that will always be a part of me, but I didn’t want it to be the main thing.” Her ceremony shoes, meanwhile, were from Paris Texas.

Cole wore a Me by Canali off-white double-breasted peak-lapel wool jacket with tan linen-and-wool trousers and a white cotton formal dress shirt. He accessorized with a off-white silk bow tie and shoes by Louboutin.

The ceremony took place outdoors in the location Vanessa initially scouted months prior, while Jay Shetty—whose Zoom meditation the couple met on—officiated the service. “[My advice to others is] don’t do first looks, because seeing each other at the altar for the first time is the most emotional moment of my life,” she says. “I literally keeled over when I saw Cole and had to take a big breath and had to force myself to keep walking because I could have dropped to the floor.”

The bride and groom wrote their own vows and read them in front of about 100 friends and family members. “[Writing my own vows] was important to me,” Vanessa says. “I would also say to everyone: Write your own vows and read them. It is the most beautiful thing ever in a relationship to be that open and vulnerable and raw in front of all of the people you love proclaiming your love. It’s just beautiful. I loved it.”

After the ceremony, Vanessa caught a glimpse of herself in the mirror and realized she’d cried off most of her makeup, so she hopped back in the chair for a quick touch-up and then was swept away for post-ceremony portraits.

While the newlyweds were taking photos, guests enjoyed cocktails. “We moved around a lot,” Vanessa explains. “Dinner took place in an area with a bunch of trees dispersed throughout. There were flower bouquets hanging from the trees above, and it felt a bit like a set.” After she finished photos, Vanessa took her cape and veil off but left on her wedding dress for dinner. “I always felt like it was such a bummer that you only get to wear your wedding dress for just your ceremony and photos, so I really wanted to stay in it longer,” she says.

When dinner was over, Vanessa changed into her reception dress. She knew she wanted to be in something super-lightweight and airy for this part of the night—in her words, a dress that she could “throw around”—so she opted for another Vera Wang gown, this time made from strapless macrame lace and silk mousseline. “I had found this one dress that had the corset bodice part of the dress I ultimately ended up wearing,” she explains. “It was this French lace with really pretty iridescent stones in it—it was super romantic, but the dress puffed out a lot, so I asked if we could change out the bottom into a chiffon and make it super sheer and flirty, and they actually put lace in built-in underwear and made a garter.” For her reception shoes, she selected a pair of Larroudé Vivienne platforms.

After the meal, speeches, and the bride’s dress change, guests moved to another area of the venue where there was a live band. “They crushed it,” Vanessa says. “One of my really good friends did a song for us called ‘Cole and V.’ And, of course, me and my husband, being the music-obsessed people that we are, we actually had to join in and participate. Cole played the drums and I sang. I couldn’t even tell you what we did. I only knew the chorus of the song, we were just riffing and playing and having fun. It was a safe space with all of the people who love us so you couldn’t do anything wrong.”

When the band finished, a DJ—who worked from a playlist Cole had put together—came on to keep the party going. “He included all of the bangers and classics from Nelly to Eminem,” Vanessa says. “We danced for a while, then we had late-night snacks, like grilled cheese and pizza. And then we had it all wrapped up by 11 p.m.”

Reflecting back on the wedding in the days following, Vanessa is still very much riding an emotional high. “It was genuinely the most magical weekend of my life,” she says. “I am so grateful that we got to have a private wedding, and it helped that I took everyone’s phones away. It was amazing because at the dinner, I would look around and everyone was talking to each other—our family and friend groups coming together and creating real relationships that I know they’re going to invest real time into. Seeing that and bringing everyone together and celebrating us, it was just so magical. Literally talking about it right now, I’m getting teary-eyed. I couldn’t have dreamt it to be any better. I knew it was going to be magical, but it exceeded my expectations.”