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Sandra Bullock, 61, Is Back. She Did It Her Way

The Oscar winner stepped away from Hollywood to raise her kids. Now she’s returning on her own terms with ‘Practical Magic 2’


sandra bullock standing in front of the cinema con red carpet wall, wearing a red blazer and black bra style top
Sandra Bullock, 61, at CinemaCon in Las Vegas on April 14, 2026. Bullock is returning to acting after a four-year break.
Gabe Ginsberg/Getty Images

Key takeaways

  • Bullock, 61, returns to screens this fall in Practical Magic 2, her first film since 2022.
  • The actor took a four-year break from working to raise her children, Louis and Laila.
  • She built the film’s production schedule around her kids’ school calendar.

Sandra Bullock, 61, walked onto the CinemaCon stage in Las Vegas on April 14 alongside Nicole Kidman, and the crowd went wild. It had been four years since Bullock made a film.

Now she is back, as both actor and producer. Practical Magic 2, the sequel to the 1998 movie, is set to open this fall. The price of admission was simple: The shoot had to happen around her children’s school schedule.

“I knew my kids were out of school,” she said at the CNBC Changemakers Summit in New York on April 16. “I’m not going to sacrifice … my time with my kids.”

Bullock adopted son Louis in 2010 and daughter Laila in 2015. She has been open for years about pulling back from acting to be present for them.  

nicole kidman and sandra bullock in a scene from practical magic 2
Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock star as the Owens sisters in “Practical Magic 2.”
Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures

“I do not do my best work if my children are struggling or if they need something and I can’t facilitate it. I’m raising my children, not anybody else,” she said at the CNBC event.

‘I’m tired of hiding’

At the CNBC summit, Bullock was direct about something many working parents know but rarely say out loud: the performance of pretending at work that your children do not exist.

“I’m tired of hiding,” she said, describing years of proving herself as a producer while managing school drop-offs and the daily logistics of raising two kids.

Breaking through as a producer required fighting a different kind of battle, separate from raising her kids. “As an actor, when you decide, ‘I’m going to become a producer,’ everyone goes, ‘Oh, the actress wants to produce. OK.’ And you have to prove yourself over and over again.”

sandra bullock and maisie williams in a scene from practical magic 2
(From left) Sandra Bullock, Maisie Williams and Joey King in “Practical Magic 2.”
Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures

Bullock’s pause was made possible by something most working parents do not have: a financial runway. Her net worth is estimated at $250 million, according to Parade. She did not need the next paycheck. Most people do. She knows it.

Balancing work and family looks different at every age and income level. Whether you are returning to work after a caregiving break, navigating a career change or figuring out how to make the finances work, AARP has tools and resources to help.

“I have the luxury of doing that in this business,” she said at the CNBC summit. “So many people don’t. And I understand that grief and that angst when you are at work going, I’m not where I need to be right now.

She is right. According to an AARP survey conducted in winter 2025, 41 percent of adults 50 and older who are working or looking for work cite financial need for basic living expenses as their primary reason for staying in the workforce. Among those who have returned to work after retiring, nearly half say they came back because they needed the money. Choosing your moment is a privilege most working parents don’t have.

She’s online, but on her terms

Bullock also recently joined Instagram, where she has amassed more than 5 million followers, per her verified account. She said she resisted social media for years and agreed to try it only after careful thought about what she could contribute without losing herself in it.

sandra bullock in a scene from practical magic 2
Sandra Bullock as Sally Owens in “Practical Magic 2,” which arrives in theaters in fall 2026.
Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures

“I never jump on anything,” she said at the CNBC event. “I’m not spontaneous. I need a plan. I need to think about it … what can I contribute, how badly can I f--- it up?”

The key takeaways were created with the assistance of generative AI. An AARP editor reviewed and refined the content for accuracy and clarity.

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