You might think it’s over the top that Sheryl Lee Ralph wore an 80-foot shawl for her vow renewal to Pennsylvania state senator Vincent Hughes on the Rocky Steps at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. But let Sheryl herself deliver the counterargument: “How could I walk up all of those steps without leaving a trail of something for everybody to look at?” she tells Vogue.

Several months ago, the Broadway legend—and Emmy Award-winning star of Abbott Elementary—decided to hold a recommitment ceremony with her husband to celebrate their 20th wedding anniversary. Originally, it was going to be an intimate event. But as the saying goes, the best-laid (and most laid-back) plans often go awry. It soon snowballed into a 250-guest affair held at the Philadelphia landmark. Don’t blame Sheryl, though: “My husband has turned into groomzilla, and his list is twice as long as mine,” she says, laughing.

Earlier this year, Sheryl and Vincent made headlines when she revealed that they don’t live together. They never have: When the couple wed in 2005, Sheryl was a working actor in Los Angeles with two young children. Vincent lived in—and represented—the Seventh Senatorial District of Pennsylvania. Neither could move without sacrificing their dreams or uprooting their families. “I wasn’t at a place where I was willing to give up my career, but I also didn’t want to give up having a stable relationship with the kind of man that I knew would be there for me,” she says. “When Beyoncé says, ‘You put my love on top,’ he put my love right on top, top, top.” So they settled on a nontraditional long-distance relationship. With plenty of honest communication—and some couples therapy—it worked.

They could have rewed inside the museum amid its Monets and Rubenses. Sheryl, however, chose to do so on the Rocky Steps, the nickname for the museum’s staircase that Sylvester Stallone famously ran up in the 1976 sports drama Rocky.

The decision was made partly because Sheryl wanted to make a grand entrance. But it was also because one of Rocky’s most famous lines—“It ain’t about how hard you hit, it’s about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward”—has always resonated with Sheryl. “In marriage, we have so many things that happen in life,” she says. “People live. People die. Relationships change. You change. Your partner changes. Your family, your immediate family, your extended family—there are changes in life. And then there’s just the everyday of it. How are you able to get back up again and continue being together? I love that sentiment.”

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