When you’re arguably the most famous person in the world — or, at least, the one with the most intensely devoted fan base — planning your star-studded wedding day to an equally beloved sports hero was always going to be a logistical nightmare. How do you keep the day intimate, keep your guests happy and pull it off without a hitch — all while making it the best day of your life? For Taylor Swift, history offers a playbook: John F. Kennedy Jr. pulled off the exact same trick.
On September 21, 1996, Kennedy — the widely beloved, closely watched scion of Camelot — married the love of his too-brief life, Carolyn Bessette, at the First African Baptist Church on Georgia’s Cumberland Island. The paparazzi frenzy over the secretive event foreshadowed the press scrutiny the couple would face throughout their three brief years of marriage. Photographers and tabloid reporters circled incessantly — but not on the first day of autumn in 1996. Rosemarie Terenzio made sure of that.
Terenzio was Kennedy’s chief of staff and, that summer, his de facto wedding planner. In effect, she wrote the blueprint for how celebrities dodge the press to pull off a beautiful, private wedding. It’s a blueprint that may not even be necessary for Swift and Travis Kelce, who have fueled wedding rumors for weeks, specifically surrounding an alleged Madison Square Garden booking for a post-wedding, fan-facing event.
“I think they’re married already,” Terenzio told The Hollywood Reporter on Wednesday. “I think it’s either a big party for a bunch of people that weren’t at the wedding, or it’s something for her fans.”
Call it Terenzio’s dos and don’ts of pulling off a secret celebrity wedding — culled from her expert run 30 years ago for Kennedy and Bessette, and from the advice she’s dropped in interviews over the past week, including her chat with THR.
DO: Use Decoys
For Kennedy, Terenzio used plants and subterfuge to keep the press away from the real destination, Cumberland Island. As she wrote in The Free Press, she planted fake Ireland honeymoon itineraries around the office of Kennedy’s George magazine, so any staffer leaking details would send the press chasing the wrong continent.
“I had a reporter call me that morning and say, ‘I’m about to book a flight to Ireland — should I go?’ And I just said, ‘I wouldn’t if I were you,’ and that was it.”
She also gave Bessette a code name — Nicole Miller — who happened to be planning her own wedding at the same time. The wine, the gown, the vendor arrangements: as far as anyone outside the inner circle knew, it was all for Miller’s big day. It worked like a charm.
Rumor has it the entire Kansas City Chiefs team is booked into the Marriott Marquis in Times Square for the weekend. If true, great news for the groom. If it’s a decoy?
“If it is, it’s genius,” Terenzio said.
DON’T: Put Anything in Writing
Leaving a paper trail doesn’t work for confessional lyrics, and it definitely doesn’t work for a secret wedding.
“Don’t put anything in writing — everything by phone or in person,” Terenzio said. “If you get people invested in the secret and they feel like they’re part of it, it’s kind of exciting that they’re keeping it, and they understand.”
DO: Keep It Small
As Terenzio recounts in The Free Press, the Kennedy-Bessette guest list topped out around 40 people, with no printed invitations. Kennedy trimmed the extended-family list to one representative per branch; Bessette invited family and a handful of her and John’s closest friends.
“If anything about the wedding was leaked, we would have known exactly who talked. But honestly, I don’t think anyone wanted to. Everyone in that circle was so invested in helping John and Carolyn have this moment,” she wrote.
That may well be the model if Swift and Kelce already had a smaller, private ceremony, as Terenzio suspects. But if they’re also throwing a blowout at MSG for over 1,000 guests — many of them celebrities with their own schedules, publicists and fans — keeping that mostly under wraps is nothing short of a miracle.
DON’T: Overuse Social Media
“I think she’s smart about not putting anything on social media, because I think it’s in service to her fans — not wanting them running all over the place. For us, it was more about the media than the people. If you guys took a ride out to the Hamptons and got duped, sorry, but that was the point,” Terenzio said.
DO: Embrace the Narrative That Emerges
Back in the summer of 1996, an unexpected moment nearly blew the secret — and instead became a gift. Terenzio explained how it played out.
“We did have a stroke of luck. When Carolyn was in Paris with Narciso Rodriguez for her wedding dress fitting, someone snapped a couple of photos of them and said John and Carolyn broke up and this is her new man — two weeks before the wedding. It was perfect.”
Could that trick work for Swift in 2026, with a wedding this closely watched and the timeline already public? No. Nobody would believe it — we’re all far too invested in this ship sailing into the sunset.
Still, there’s a lesson here: if a lucky break falls in your lap, take it and don’t ask questions. Swift is a beloved oversharer, but on this one, silence is golden.
DO: Make Them Feel Like the Cool Kids
Asking guests to keep quiet isn’t just about protecting the couple — it’s smart psychology. Secrecy sells exclusivity.
“They’re like, ‘Yeah, let’s do this,'” Terenzio said. “They feel like they’re part of it, they’re part of the crowd.”
But don’t take it too far, as Swift may have already. One report cites an insider claiming some guests are frustrated.
“Taylor and Travis are taking the secrecy too far. Everyone understands wanting privacy, but at some point it starts feeling like they don’t trust the very people they’re inviting.”
DO: Drop Hints
Social media is a variable John-John never had to manage. But it’s also a useful smokescreen. Post a few breadcrumbs. Keep people guessing. Swift and Kelce have certainly kept the world guessing right up to the wire — the wedding of the decade is reportedly a day away, and even THR is going on secondhand intel.
“You just post things about, ‘Oh, we’re having so much fun in XYZ,’ or decoy photos of places you’re not actually going to be,” Terenzio said.
DO: Whatever You Want
At the end of the day, Swift is beloved by millions and disliked by almost no one. When you can do no wrong, nothing is too much — not sending reporters to Ireland, not turning an unwitting designer into a fake tabloid boyfriend, not shutting down 31st and 33rd Streets to rent out Madison Square Garden for the weekend.
“I think she should do whatever the heck she wants, and he should too,” Terenzio said. “I don’t think anything’s over the top if that’s what you want to do. Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce, you can do whatever the heck you want.”
DON’T: Betray Your Fans
Swift’s fanbase is unlike any other — built, in large part, on inviting listeners along for her life’s emotional journey. That intimacy is a risk in a secret-wedding scenario. Kennedy’s foil was the tabloid media. Swift’s fans are the ones she’s built this relationship of vulnerability with, through the music itself. She can’t leave them in the lurch.
Decoys and subterfuge are fun in theory — but sending fans on a wild goose chase just to shake them isn’t Swift’s brand, and she’d be wise not to send Swifties trekking around New York in the middle of a heat wave for nothing.
Still, for the Swifties camped outside MSG on Friday hoping for a glimpse of the bride: a discreet tarp set up for guests coming and going may be the first sign of disappointment. But this is Taylor Swift. She’s got some fan service up her sleeve.
Rosemarie Terenzio is the author of Fairy Tale Interrupted: A Memoir of Life, Love, and Loss, a memoir of her time working with John F. Kennedy Jr.
View original source — The Hollywood Reporter ↗
