A potential third trip to the Miss United States stage edged into view when Heather Burns—the actor forever linked to Cheryl “Miss Rhode Island” Frasier—told reporters at the Tribeca Festival that she “would jump at” making another Miss Congeniality film.
Entertainment outlets Just Jared and Geo.TV quickly framed the remark as the clearest sign yet that talks are under way about a new installment, with Burns praising the camaraderie she built with co-star Sandra Bullock and calling the first two shoots “the best experience of my life”.
Released in 2000, Miss Congeniality collected $212.8 million worldwide on a $45 million budget, turning Bullock’s undercover FBI agent Gracie Hart into a holiday-season draw. The 2005 follow-up,Miss Congeniality 2: Armed and Fabulous, grossed $101.3 million and kept Burns in the spotlight thanks to her “April 25” gag, a clip that resurfaces every spring on morning shows and social feeds.
Comscore senior analyst Paul Dergarabedian notes that studios are relying on recognisable brands “because audiences understand the shorthand,” a factor he says is fuelling this year’s box-office rebound. The trend is echoed in The Wrap’s recent survey of nostalgia-driven releases jockeying for Memorial Day and beyond, bolstering the business case for a Congeniality return.
Should the project advance, it would keep Bullock’s Fortis Films aligned with Warner Bros., a partnership that stretches back to the first picture and still anchors many of the actor-producer’s comedies. Franchise writer Marc Lawrence—who scripted the original and its sequel—remains in Bullock’s creative orbit, making him an obvious candidate to shepherd a script with Burns’ input. Distribution strategy, insiders say, will hinge on whether the star’s drawing power favors a traditional theatrical rollout or a streaming debut, a decision Warner executives have yet to formalise.
For Burns, whose “perfect date” meme enjoys perennial renewal, the prospect is simple: a chance to reunite with friends and step back into a sash that still fits the pop-culture calendar.