Jason Momoa helped his 18‑year‑old daughter, Lola, into multiple leis and posed for family photos at her high school graduation in Los Angeles on June 4, an image of co‑parenting that drew attention because the couple’s divorce was finalized earlier this year.
The family was photographed at California State University in Los Angeles, where Momoa and Lisa Bonet stood alongside Lola as she wore a white gown over a light green dress in one account and a green floral maxidress in another. Momoa was seen in casual, colorful shirts — reported once as a pink button‑down with cream pants and a matching beret, and elsewhere in a red linen button‑down with ivory trousers and a cap — while Bonet favored breezy sundresses, described either as white and orange with balloon sleeves or a puff‑sleeved dress, paired with circular sunglasses, sandals or black toe‑loop sandals and a straw tote.
The outfits and photographs captured more than a ceremony; they captured a family ritual. Momoa assisted Lola with the leis and lingered for pictures, and the exes posed together with their daughter — a public moment that followed years of changes in their relationship. The reunion was steady and unembellished: a shared parental presence centered on their child’s milestone.
Momoa and Bonet’s history is brief to list and dense in headlines. They began dating in 2005, secretly married in 2017, quietly separated in 2020 and went public with their split in 2022. Bonet filed for divorce in January 2024 and the paperwork was finalized later that year; the couple waived financial support, reached an agreement on assets and filed for joint custody of their children. They share two children, Lola and their 17‑year‑old son, Nakoa‑Wolf. Even after they separated, they remained close for their children.
The appearance together at Lola’s ceremony comes with an obvious wrinkle: they are legally divorced. Public statements over the years underline the way they framed that change. In a past remark Momoa pushed back at leaks about their marriage, saying someone had made the news public, and he has described long years together and family gatherings as celebrations of love. He has made clear they have not resumed a romantic partnership, stressing instead that they remain family.
The couple’s joint announcement when they first parted framed the split as a mutual, considered change: they described feeling the pressure of transformational times, said the love between them would continue to evolve, and emphasized an unwavering devotion to their children. Those words — that they were parting ways in marriage while preserving love and care for their family — now sit beside images of them standing together at a commencement.
The friction is simple: a finalized divorce paired with a public, amicable reunion for a child’s milestone can be read as either a signal of reconciliation or as confirmation of deliberate co‑parenting. Their behavior at the ceremony, and Momoa’s repeated insistence that they are not back together but remain family, favors the latter reading. They showed up as parents, not as a reunited couple.
What comes next is not listed in public filings or calendars. There is no sign from the graduation photos that a romantic reconciliation is underway; instead, the moment sharpened what the family has already said it would do: gather for their children. For now the picture is clear enough to close on: Momoa and Bonet attended Lola’s high school graduation together to celebrate their daughter’s milestone, and their presence was an extension of an agreed‑upon, post‑marriage partnership rather than a public resumption of married life.





