Catherine Zeta-Jones and Michael Douglas’ son Dylan is a college grad.
The couple attended the 21-year-old’s graduation ceremony from Brown University on Saturday.
“Graduation congratulations to my boy, my pride, my joy, Dylan,” the actress, 52, gushed in an Instagram tribute on Sunday. “I am inexplicably proud of you and I love you beyond words.”
The Tony winner went on to show the “beautiful fall day” on the Rhode Island campus via her Instagram Stories.
As for 77-year-old Douglas, the “Kominsky Method” alum called himself “one proud dad” in an Instagram post of his own on Sunday. he added, “Congratulations Dylan! Well done!”
The couple, who are also the parents of 19-year-old daughter Carys, documented their emotional farewell when Douglas moved into his Brown University dorm in September 2018.
“Let the lectures really begin! I love you Dylan,” the Welsh star told her eldest via Instagram at the time. “Good luck in the next exciting and enlightening chapter of your life.”
Zeta-Jones went on to give a glimpse of Dylan’s bedroom, including his Rolling Stone and Union Jack posters. She also showed Carys and her older brother sobbing while hugging goodbye.
Last year, Carys celebrated her own graduation with Dylan and their parents as she finished high school.
“Congratulations to Carys and the entire class of 2021!” Douglas captioned May 2021 family photos. “Your Mom and I are so proud of you! We love you so much and we are so excited for your future as the best is yet to come!”
In her own post, Zeta-Jones noted that Carys graduated “with honors for her International Baccalaureate,” concluding, “You rock and we love you.”
The “Mask of Zorro” star told Drew Barrymore that same month that Douglas has warned their children — and his 43-year-old son Cameron whom he shares with ex-wife Diandra Luker — against following in his acting footsteps.
“If you are successful in business, it’s not an easy way in [for your kids]. In fact, one has to prove oneself more,” Zeta-Jones explained at the time. “Even with that deterrent, my kids are like, ‘No, sorry, we still want to do it.’”