Sienna Miller put on a radiant display as she arrived at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club for the Wimbledon Championships on Tuesday afternoon.
The British actress, 42, was accompanied by her boyfriend Oli Green, 27, who is the father of her second born daughter, whose name is not publicly known.
The couple made a stylish arrival at the iconic west London venue, as they were pictured walking arm-in-arm underneath a branded umbrella.
They are due to appear in the prestigious royal box on Centre Court, where Jannik Sinner will take on Daniil Medvedev in the men’s quarter finals.
Later in the day, Jasmine Paolini faces Emma Navarro in the women’s quarter finals for a chance to appear in Saturday’s final.

Sienna Miller put on a radiant display as she arrived at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club for the Wimbledon Championships on Tuesday afternoon

The British actress, 42, was accompanied by her boyfriend Oli Green, 27, who is the father of her second born daughter, whose name is not publicly known

The couple made a stylish arrival at the iconic venue, as they were pictured walking arm-in-arm underneath a branded umbrella
Sienna, who makes an annual appearance at the Championships, looked typically chic in a neutral polka dot co-ord, which flashed her bare midriff.
The mother of two, who welcomed her second child in January, teamed the stylish two piece with a pair of strappy heels and a white bag.
The Anatomy of a Scandal star wore her signature blonde locks in a cool up do and enhanced her pretty features with soft glam make-up.
Her actor boyfriend looked dapper in a sharp dark grey suit, which he teamed with a white shirt and a black tie.

They are due to appear in the prestigious royal box on Centre Court, where Jannik Sinner will take on Daniil Medvedev in the men’s quarter finals

Later in the day, Jasmine Paolini faces Emma Navarro in the women’s quarter finals for a chance to appear in Sunday’s final

Sienna, who makes an annual appearance at the Championships, looked typically chic in a neutral polka dot co-ord, which flashed her bare midriff.
It comes after Djokovic grabbed the microphone and aimed a roman candle straight at the Centre Court crowd during his match on Monday evening.
The seven-time champion turned his on-court interview into a rant about what he felt were boos directed at him during his straight-sets win.
It seemed the crowd were simply cheering ‘Ruuuuuuune’ for his opponent but Djokovic, as he often does, saw things differently.
‘To all the fans that have had respect and stayed here tonight, I thank you from the bottom of my heart and I appreciate it,’ he began. ‘And to all those people that have chosen to disrespect the player – in this case me – have a goooooooood night.’
His rather non-plussed BBC interviewer Rishi Persad said: ‘I am hoping they were just commenting on Rune, and they were not disrespecting you.’
Djokovic – who has a track record of taking on crowds – was having none of that. ‘They were. They were [disrespecting me],’ he insisted. ‘I am not accepting it. No no no. I know they were cheering for Rune but that’s an excuse to also boo.

Michael McIntyre looked smart in a navy suit and white shirt for the occasion

Stephen Fry cut a dapper figure in a cream suit which he paired with a blue shirt and blue and pink striped tie

Cliff Richard offered a thumbs up as he arrived in a teal suit

Adrian Chiles was wearing a blue grey suit with a tonal blue tie


Novak Djokovic took aim at the Centre Court crowd on Monday, accusing them of disrespecting him

The seven-time champion turned his on-court interview into a rant about what he felt were boos directed at him

Novak Djokovic pretends to play the violin for his daughter as he celebrates winning against Denmark’s Holger Rune

The tennis star’s wife Jelena Djokovic looked slightly uncomfortable as Djokovic took on the crowd

His outburst came after he saw off Holger Rune in straight sets to move into the quarter-finals
‘Listen, I have been on the tour for more than 20 years. I know all the tricks. I focus on the respectful people that pay for the ticket, and love tennis and appreciate the players. I played in much more hostile environments, trust me – you guys can’t touch me.’
The 37-year-old seemed to believe some in the crowd were masking boos in the pretence of supporting Rune. To my ears it seemed no different to Lord’s saluting Joe Root after a century.
Rune himself said: ‘I mean, if you don’t know what was happening, probably it sounded like boo. But if we all know what happened, it was my name.’
The tennis felt almost incidental after all that, but for the record Djokovic won 6-3, 6-4, 6-2 and put in by a distance his best display of the Championships so far. Rune was poor, losing the first 12 points of the match and never really recovering.
In his press conference later, Djokovic stood by what he had said.
‘When I feel a crowd is stepping over the line, I react,’ he said. ‘I don’t regret my words or actions on the court.’
He also tweeted a photo after the game of him stretching for a ball across the court, with the caption: ‘Sliding into quarters. Goooooooooooood night.’