Harry Potter Stars Reflect On Film Series In Reunion Special — Plus, Producers Admit Emma Photo Mistake

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The Harry Potter 20th Anniversary: Return To Hogwarts special premiered on January 1 and brought joy and nostalgia to countless fans all over the world. And it was every bit as joyful and nostalgic for the stars of the film series to return to the franchise that was their home for over ten years. 

Return To Hogwarts marks the 20th anniversary of the release of the first film in the series, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. To mark this special occasion, many of the franchise’s stars returned to the Warner Bros. studios where all of the Harry Potter movies were filmed. And in the special, the cast spoke from the heart about their Harry Potter experience and what it all means to them. 

Read on for their heartfelt, poignant, and emotional words about making a return to Hogwarts and being part of the beloved franchise:

Daniel Radcliffe (Harry Potter)

“We’ve seen even more how much it means to people, and what a part of people’s lives it is. I was never not happy to be a part of that, but it means even more now. I’m able to appreciate how special that is. It’s a nice thing. It has been lovely to see everyone. It really has. I didn’t know if it would be. I have a very mixed relationship with nostalgia. It’s just so much feeling that it can be weirdly painful sometimes, because there’s so much of life to take in that happened in those ten years. But seeing everyone again and going, ‘Oh yeah, we’re all doing great.’

I think the thing that scared me the most when we were coming out of it was the implication that the most meaningful thing in our life was done. And there’s something so joyous about seeing everyone. And it wasn’t though. We’ve all gone on to other stuff. We have wives and kids and lives. There’s something really lovely about seeing that.

I’ll always be happy to talk about it. Again, I think that people expect me not to want to talk about it. But that’s like somebody never talking about their childhood or their teenage years. Every part of my life is connected to Potter and to Leavesden. My first kiss is connected to someone here, my first girlfriends were here… it all spirals out from the Potter set somewhere… We actually did our growing up privately still; we just did it on a film set. And we did it with each other. And that’s bizarre.”

EMMA WATSON (Hermione Granger)

“I honestly didn’t know how I was going to feel [returning]. And then something happened where it was just like the comfort of the people that I’ve known for such a long time and the history that we share and that sense of safety. And then, once I started feeling really safe, enjoying everything that we made and that we created and feeling like we could kind of celebrate and just enjoy being together. Some of us haven’t seen each other for years. So, it’s just been a joy. An unexpected joy. 

I really didn’t know how I would feel. I felt quite overwhelmed this morning. I’ve just been really pleasantly surprised by actually just getting to relive it all.”

RUPERT GRINT (Ron Weasley)

“It was amazing to see everyone again. It’s been a long time since I’ve seen any of them. But I think about those movies all the time. And I remember a lot. But it was such a weird time to finish something that had been our lives. So I think coming out of it, it was always important for me to figure out what I was doing, who I was… It’s been nice to have that time. This is the perfect time to sit down with everyone and reminisce. It’s so nostalgic and it’s everywhere. It’s never really left me. It’s found so many different new lives. Even the music can stir it for me. There’s so much nostalgia threaded into these movies. It’s a really important part of all of our lives and it’s great to see everyone again.

For me, it was amazing growing up. I got involved with it because I was a fan of the books. I was obsessed with this world and escaping into it. To suddenly dive into the books and be on the sets and live it for real is indescribable, really. It was an absolute dream. Just very surreal. You had to really pinch yourself in some moments because it just didn’t feel like it was really happening. As the films got on, it wore off a little bit [laughs]. Not in a bad way. But it became more real, and you just felt hugely grateful to be a part of it.”

TOM FELTON (Draco Malfoy)

“It feels rather strange to be back here in Leavesden, to be honest with you. It’s been a while and it’s been great seeing everyone. All the familiar faces. It’s bizarre, actually, how long it’s been since we’ve seen each other and how short amount of time it took for us to be all chummy back again, so yeah, good times.”

MATTHEW LEWIS (Neville Longbottom)

“It’s hard to put into words, really. I went on the Great Hall set earlier and we shot a bit for this. It’s all dressed and they’re doing this incredible dancing, and everyone’s in costume and it’s all set for a ball, and I kind of just walk straight in and did my bit without really looking around, as if like it was back to work, which is weird 10 years later. I just suddenly thought for a moment, ‘Hang on, just recall where you are right now, just take a moment.’ I’m quite bad at just having a moment and taking things in around me, I kind of get tunnel vision quite a bit in life. I took a moment to just sort of look around the Great Hall and sort of take it in and try and think about the significance of it, of being back on there.

Seeing everyone was wild, it was really cool. It was really surreal in that it didn’t feel like it was…it wasn’t unusual, it was great and it was cool, but it was like, ‘Oh, we’re just back here again.’ It very much felt like that. Even though it was 10 years ago since we finished, it still feels so close, to me anyway. Time-wise it feels very close.”

BONNIE WRIGHT (Ginny Weasley)

“It’s an almost out-of-body experience being back here at Leavesden. So much of it is familiar but then also so much of it is kind of slightly different because obviously it’s been turned into this wonderful tour. So it’s kind of those elements to the sets with a sort of slightly different kind of layout. Not exactly the same door that we walked in when we used to for 10 years when we arrived on set every day. But then you see everyone’s faces and it just brings so many memories back and it’s just lovely to be here and to share this anniversary together. It’s been really special, and I think my brain is still computing everything that’s going on and taking it all in.”

EVANNA LYNCH (Luna Lovegood)

“It’s lovely, I mean, the whole studio is obviously much more glossy than when we filmed on it, so it feels different. And also, it just feels really nice to come back as an adult and with the maturity and, I suppose, wisdom that you’ve gained in 10 years. I think as a teenager I often felt quite anxious on set and felt self-conscious, so to come here and feel more grown up and more relaxed, it’s lovely. I wish I had felt this relaxed when I was younger, actually.

You know, we all want to have that connection to something magical. I think we all sense that there is more than just this Muggle world, there is more than just the world of form, and that the Harry Potter world is so rich, so textured, and so beautifully drawn by J.K. Rowling, really. And yet, the main characters are all very relatable people. They have these special powers but they’re normal teenagers who are struggling with the same sense of inadequacy, insecurity and questioning what their purpose is in the world, and just figuring all that out.”

JAMES & OLIVER PHELPS (Fred & George Weasley)

OLIVER: “It’s been quite a few years since we’ve seen each other, so to come back to where it was actually taking place…albeit it’s been a bit more glamorized since when we were here before…but it’s still really special, like being in the Great Hall with everyone earlier was just incredible.”

JAMES: “And also, there were a couple guys on the crew who were on the crew when we were filming, so that’s also cool. No one ever speaks enough about the crew that made it as well, so that’s cool too…. We were spoiled with everybody here – not just the adults but the younger members of the cast, shall we say. Although we had a good laugh, everyone was very professional, and I guess that did stem from the adult actors. Having Julie Walters and Mark Williams as our parents in the scenes and all the movies definitely was a great experience because we could always just chat with them for any bit of advice. And another person which I didn’t really work so much with in a scene but spoke to off set was Michael Gambon. He was always so giving with his time. I can’t speak highly enough of him. If I told him that I was doing a show, a different production somewhere else, he’d ask if I had the script, and if I did, he would sit down and talk me through it. You don’t expect things like that from people, but that always stayed with me.”

ALFRED ENOCH (Dean Thomas)

“It was very strange getting in the car and going back to Leavesden Studios, that’s something I haven’t done for a long time. It was a bit of a surreal start to the day, I suppose. The other thing that struck me is how much everything’s changed. It looks completely different to what it looked like when we were here shooting. But still as you start realizing, ‘Oh, yeah, that’s where the runway used to be…I guess that’s the flight shed,’ it’s funny these things start coming back. Same thing being back with everyone, I suppose. We’ve all been shooting stuff today, so most of us have sort of either snatched little moments with each other before we’ve gone off to do this, that or the other, or had a little catch-up now during lunch, which was really nice. It’s nice to have the opportunity to come back and see everyone and take a trip down memory lane, I suppose.

The thing that really stays with me from the first film is just how much fun it was to be exposed to this world, to get to be part of a story which I knew and loved. I’d read the first two books by the time I was involved in the first film, and I loved them, so to get to be part of this world that I had been conjuring up in my mind as I was reading those books was a real luxury.”

ROBBIE COLTRANE (Hagrid)

“This has been like a family reunion, literally. You got to remember, when they started they were about eight. I think the oldest of them was 11 and now they’re big grown-ups with their own lives. Grint’s had a baby, Grint’s now a father. It’s just astonishing, the change. Watching them growing up is kind of like watching your own kids grow up. It was never really an issue how young they were. The great thing is that an awful lot of the crew were parents themselves, so everyone was on their best behavior. There was no fighting or swearing on set. And I was always astonished at how fearless they were because I remember walking to the Great Hall and I’ve been doing this for 30 years and thinking, ‘Dear, Lord…better get this one right,’ and they were just kind of, you know, the way kids do. I do have enormous happy memories of this, I’d say. I think we all do.”

GARY OLDMAN (Sirius Black)

“It was a long time ago, and yet, it’s all just incredibly familiar. All the memories of working here come flooding back. It was like it was last week… It is a weird experience because you met them as kids and now some of them are married and they’ve got kids of their own. My memory of them is locked – it’s sort of locked in. Obviously, they’ve grown up.

The great thing about the Potter experience was that a lot of kids couldn’t see the type of movies that I made. And then my fanbase was then suddenly, it shifted from like four years old and up. So a whole new kind of fanbase opened up for you.”

HELENA BONHAM CARTER (Bellatrix Lestrange)

“It’s been really touching, it’s strange, slightly disembodying coming back because it’s been for me probably over 11 years, so a lot has changed.”

JASON ISAACS (Lucius Malfoy)

“I think the entire encyclopedic landscape of it all has burned itself into the fans’ minds and mine. We were all fans. One of the reasons the films turned out so well, I think, is that all of us on the set were as big of fans as you could find outside the studio. We all got the books as soon as they came out. We all devoured them. We all knew that something special was going on.”

MARK WILLIAMS (Arthur Weasley)

“Leavesden’s totally changed, it’s not what it was at all, because it was an old aircraft factory… But now, it’s a new, modern electronic facility, so it feels completely different apart for when you get on set – on the studio tour. Because they were the original set. So that just feels like being back.

People have been asking me if it feels weird to see the family and, no it’s not, it’s 20 years ago and they’ve all grown up, as they should. It would be really weird if they were still the same age.”

IAN HART (Professor Quirrell)

“It’s really kind of strange when you drive up because it was once just a field because it had obviously been an airport…not an airport, an RAF testing base is what I mean by that. It felt like it because it had a runway still, which is where they built the Dursley’s house on the runway. So it feels kind of strange because now it feels very formal.”

In other Return To Hogwarts news…

Eagle-eyed fans spotted a major booboo during the special, when a supposed childhood photo of Emma Watson was shown on-screen during a segment — but the photo was actually not of her but of another actress named Emma, Emma Roberts!

A fan realized the error and tweeted about it, and it immediately went viral! Turns out, the photo used was a throwback photo Emma Roberts posted of herself back on Instagram back in February 2012. 

In a statement released to Entertainment Weekly, the reunion special’s producers copped to the mistake, saying:

“Well spotted, Harry Potter fans! You brought an editing mistake of a mislabeled photograph to our attention. New version up shortly.”

As of this moment, neither Emmas have commented on the photo confusion. 

For more of the magic, catch the Harry Potter 20th Anniversary: Return to Hogwarts special on HBO Max.