Jason Bateman and his wife, Amanda Anka, stepped out for a rare date night at the premiere of his new dark comedy “DTF St. Louis.”
The couple, who tied the knot in 2001, smiled gleefully as they posed for photos on the red carpet at DGA Theater Complex in Los Angeles Tuesday.
For the outing, Bateman wore a black suit over a matching black crew-neck shirt, while Anka opted for a red gown with gold detailing.
Other shots showed the pair, both 57, with their arms around one another as Anka lovingly looked up at her other half.
Bateman’s new series — which also stars Linda Cardellini, David Harbour, Pedro Pascal and Peter Sarsgaard — revolves around a love triangle gone wrong after one person ends up dead.
Most recently, the “Arrested Development” alum — who shares daughters Francesca, 19, and Maple, 14, with Anka — revealed that he chose to get sober ahead of their 2001 wedding because his drinking was causing “tension” in their relationship.
Speaking to the Hollywood Reporter last week, the “Ozark” actor recalled the time when Anka asked him when the “spigot [of his partying days] was going to completely turn off.”
“[She] didn’t demand that I completely absolve, but that was sort of the back-and-forth,” he recalled of their “negotiations” over his alcohol and cocaine consumption.
“I was like, ‘Well, I feel like my [sobriety] ETA is six months away, but if I could land this plane now, it would alleviate a lot of the tension, so let’s just f–king do it,” he told the outlet.
Since then, Bateman has been California sober.
“I’ve got friends who had bottoms that were pretty chilling, but I was lucky enough to recognize, ‘This is probably as far as I should go if I still want to accomplish the things that I want to get to,’” he explained to the outlet.
“I was conscious the whole time of wanting to get a lot of these boxes checked before I became a father and a guy with a career that I not only wanted but had a feeling I might be able to get it if I just got the right job,” the “SmartLess” podcast host added.
His sobriety, wedding and breakthrough “Arrested Development” role all happened within “12 to 24 months,” Bateman explained to Esquire in December 2025, noting that he had also quit smoking cigarettes.
The decade before that was “confusing and challenging … a learning curve.”
Bateman described there was “a handful of things” he “couldn’t be doing” to be successful, and 2001 was the right time to “execute the plan.”
