Originally appeared on E! Online
Now this is a festivus for the rest of us.
After all, Jerry Seinfeld, Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Larry David reunited on Dec. 24 to celebrate a mini reunion for “Seinfeld.”
“‘The creatures were stirring…’ Seinfeld wrote in a Dec. 26 Instagram post. “Christmas Eve 2025.”
In the accompanying photos, Seinfeld, Louis-Dreyfus and David pose in a home in front of a white wall, sharing laughs as the moment was captured.
While David was typically behind the camera as the show’s co-creator and producer, the trio worked closely together on the iconic sitcom, which starred Seinfeld as a parody of himself, as well as Louis-Dreyfus as Elaine Benes and Jason Alexander as George Costanza.
The crew’s lowkey reunion came less than two weeks after the deaths of David’s close friends Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner Dec. 14, whom he eulogized in a statement alongside fellow stars Billy Crystal, Martin Short and more at the time.
Rob Reiner’s son, Nick, was being held in jail early Monday, according to jail records.
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“There is no other director who has his range,” the group’s Dec. 16 statement read. “From comedy to drama to ‘mockumentary’ to documentary he was always at the top of his game. He charmed audiences. They trusted him. They lined up to see his films.”
In the years since “Seinfeld” ended in 1998, David has put together some more formal reunions — most notably in 2009, when he and Jeff Schaffer wrote one into “Curb Your Enthusiasm” as a show within the show.
“We knew it was something we could have fun with,” David explained in his book “No Lessons Learned,” released earlier this year, “and we had no other ideas at the time.”
Indeed, Seinfeld — who co-created the self-titled show with David — also explained why the arc in David’s own series was better than a stereotypical reunion special.
“I did think it was a good idea because I knew that doing a conventional network-type reunion show was never going to be appropriate for us,” Seinfeld explained in the memoir. “So being on Larry’s show was a perfect way to do it.”
Larry David talks about how nice fans are to him in New York City, the final season of “Curb Your Enthusiasm” and the time his mom wrote a letter to a psychiatrist about him in a newspaper.