Prince Harry and Meghan Markle posed next to their fellow A-listers at a Netflix event on Friday night.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex were photographed attending Netflix’s BEEF Season 2 Montecito Tastemakers at their private residence in Montecito, California.
Throughout the evening, the couple posed alongside Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos and his wife Nicole Avant.
In another photo, Markle poses with Sarandos before hugging his wife for another photo.
The royal couple also rubbed shoulders with Katy Perry and her boyfriend, former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, at the party. Other performers at the festival included Oscar Isaac, Charles Melton and Nick Kroll.
The couple’s outing came on the same day that Page Six confirmed that Prince Harry has been sued by his former charity Sentebale for defamation and defamation following an internal dispute with the charity’s chairman.
Mark Dyer, who served as Sentebale’s trustee before Prince Harry’s falling out with Dr Sophie Chandauka was revealed, was also sued.
Sentebale’s board and executive director confirmed that the charity had “commenced legal proceedings” against Mr Harry and Mr Dyer over a “coordinated harmful media campaign” which began in March 2025.
In a statement, they claimed the pair had “caused operational disruption and reputational damage to the charity, its leadership and strategic partners”, which had “resulted in a significant viral impact and triggered an onslaught of cyberbullying against the charity and its leadership”.
However, a spokesperson for the Duke of Sussex and Dyer told Page Six that the pair “categorically reject” Mr Sentebale’s “offensive and harmful claims”.
“It is unusual that charity funds are now being used to pursue legal action against the very people who founded and supported the organization for almost 20 years, rather than being directed towards the communities the charity was established to serve,” the spokesperson said.
Prince Harry co-founded Sentebare in 2006 in honor of his mother Princess Diana, which focuses on supporting young HIV and AIDS victims in Lesotho and Botswana.
However, in March 2025, he resigned after clashing with Chandauka. Sentebale co-founder Prince Seeso of Lesotho and the board soon followed suit.
“It is with heavy hearts, and in support and solidarity with the Board, that we have decided to step down from our roles as patrons of this organization until further notice,” Harry and Seeso said in a joint statement at the time.
“It is shocking that the relationship between a charity’s trustees and its chair has broken down beyond repair,” they added.
Mr Chandauka then reported Mr Harry and his trustees to the Regulated Charities Commission for England and Wales over shocking allegations of bullying and harassment.
She claimed their conflict began when Prince Harry’s team asked her to defend Ms Markle after an awkward photo shoot at a Sentebale event in April 2024 sparked negative media coverage.
However, in an August 2025 statement, the commission found no evidence of “widespread or systematic bullying, harassment, misogyny or misogyny” at the Sentebale charity.
The commission criticized Mr Harry and Mr Chandauka for letting the dispute “play out in public” and said: “The failure to resolve the dispute internally risks having a serious impact on the charity’s reputation and undermining public confidence in the charity more generally.”
Meanwhile, sources close to Harry insisted that neither Harry nor Seeso could be considered returning to Sentebale as long as Chandauka remained the charity’s chairman.
