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Mossimo Giannulli and Lori Loughlin are no longer together. Elizabeth Much, the Full House star's representative, confirmed to E! News that she and her husband of 27 years are divorcing.
"They are living apart," her representative told E! News on October 2.
The representative told People that although the couple, who have two daughters together, Olivia Jade Giannulli, 26, and Bella Rose Giannulli, 27, have separated and are "taking a break from their marriage," "there are no legal proceedings at this time."
According to several outlets, Lori, 61, and Mossimo, 62, put their Hidden Hills, California, home up for sale earlier this year. In August 2020, the month they were both sentenced for their convictions in their college admissions scandal, the couple bought the house.
Together with their daughters and Olivia's boyfriend Jacob Elordi, Lori and Mossimo took a vacation to Sardinia, Italy, last September. In her first significant interview since serving a two-month prison sentence in 2020 for her felony conviction in the college admissions scandal, Lori talked about her personal development five months prior to that trip.
In April, she told First For Women, "I'm strong and I'm kind." "And open—open to experiences, open to life. And I'm appreciative. Thus, I would describe myself as kind, open, thankful, and strong.
Lori also considered how adversity has taught her valuable lessons in life, even though she has kept her marriage and family life private over the years.
"As an actress, I hear 'no' a lot, so I just have to be myself and persevere and try not to let in negativity," she said. "I would advise you to simply keep going. Everybody experiences both good and bad times. Life is like that. You just need to get back up, in my opinion. No one predicted that life would be easy. Although life has its beauty, it also has its share of difficulties.
"I try to be a forgiving person," Lori continued. I'm not the type to hoard things. Everyone has things happen to them. We've all been in situations where we needed to ask for forgiveness, but in order to do so, you must first learn how to extend it.
"My family wasn't one to hold grudges," she clarified, "so I didn't grow up in a place where you weren't forgiven for your mistakes. Everyone makes mistakes; nobody is flawless. I was therefore always told to let things go.
"You have to let things go for your own health because you can't hold on to negativity," Lori continued. Life is too short.

