Chris Hemsworth Gets Candid About the Complicated Chapters in His Marriage to Elsa Pataky
Chris Hemsworth says his marriage to Elsa Pataky has weathered complicated times, sharing on a podcast that the adventurous pair work hard to carve out time for each other — even as things get tricky when they’re balancing it all.
Chris Hemsworth just gave a refreshingly honest check-in on his 15-year marriage to Elsa Pataky, and it sounds like even the god of thunder wrestles with calendars, careers, and kid chaos. Not scandalous, just real.
What he said
On Jay Shetty's On Purpose podcast, Hemsworth talked about how easy it is for the relationship to slip into the background when work and parenting take over — even for two people who love the adventure of it all.
"Both having a sort of adventurous spirit, making time for one another. I think the complicated times have been when it's been all work, all kids, and all of a sudden the 'us' in the relationship is sort of non-existent."
He expanded on that, saying there are stretches where he's off working, she's off working, and then it's a whirlwind with the kids. The fix for them is carving out time for just the two of them and protecting that space from everything else that can swallow a day whole.
The quick backstory
- They met in 2010 through Hemsworth's talent agency and made things official by September.
- They got married that Christmas in Australia — fast, low-frills, very them.
- They now have three kids: India, Sasha, and Tristan.
- That puts them at 15 years married and still comparing schedules like the rest of us.
Elsa's perspective
Earlier this year, Pataky told Hello Magazine that marriage is constant work and the rough patches teach you a lot. Her philosophy is simple and pretty solid: keep growing together, keep finding the fun, pay attention to the small moments, stay curious about who your partner is now, and be ready to adapt when life pulls you in different directions. The trick, as she puts it, is figuring out how to find each other again after those stretches apart.
None of this is groundbreaking, but hearing two busy, public people put a name to the grind — and how they try to sidestep it — is oddly reassuring.