Celebrity Celebrity Family Wynonna Judd and Ashley Judd: All About the Famous Sisters and Their Sibling Bond Wynonna and Ashley Judd were both raised by their late mother, country singer Naomi Judd By Rebecca Aizin Rebecca Aizin Rebecca Aizin is an Associate Editor at PEOPLE. She has been working at PEOPLE since 2023. Her work has previously appeared on Elle, HGTV and Backstage. People Editorial Guidelines Published on January 11, 2024 04:45PM EST Ashley Judd and Wynonna Judd seen backstage for CMT Coal Miner's Daughter: A Celebration of the Life & Music of Loretta Lynn on October 30, 2022 in Nashville, Tennessee. Photo: Catherine Powell/Getty Wynonna and Ashley Judd have come together to support each other since the death of their mother, country star Naomi Judd. The country singer and Divergent actress’ relationship has had its ups and downs through the years, but after Naomi died by suicide at 76 on April 30, 2022, Wynonna told TODAY that she and Ashley were closer than they’d been “in a long time.” “We love each other, and we show up for each other. We don’t agree on much, but we support one another,” she said on the show in October 2022. “And we agree to disagree, we’ve had some tough conversations lately about what are we gonna do now that we have each other?” Ashley, for her part, echoed similar sentiments, sharing a few months after her mom’s death that while the two sisters were in “different places” in their grieving processes, they were experiencing it together. "One of the things that I think we have done well as a family, meaning my pop, my sister Wynonna and me, is we have really given each other the dignity and the allowance to grieve in our individual and respective ways," she said on the Healing with David Kessler podcast in July 2022. From growing up in the South to how they came together after their mom’s death, here’s everything to know about Wynonna and Ashley Judd's sister relationship. They grew up in both Kentucky and Tennessee Ashley Judd, Naomi Judd and Wynonna Judd during APLA 6th Commitment to Life Concert Benefit. Ke.Mazur/WireImage Wynonna was born in Kentucky on May 30, 1964, to Naomi and her then-boyfriend Charles Jordan. However, Jordan soon left Naomi and she married Michael Ciminella shortly after. The pair welcomed their daughter, Ashley, on April 19, 1968, and they moved to Los Angeles. Naomi and Ciminella divorced just four years later, and Naomi moved back to Kentucky with her daughters in 1976. Three years later, they moved again to Nashville, Tennessee, so that Naomi and Wynonna could pursue their country music careers. Ashley called Wynonna “Sister Mommy” when they were younger Ashley Judd and Wynonna Judd pose for a portrait circa November, 1991 in Los Angeles, California. Ron Davis/Getty In a televised interview with Dan Rather in 2015, Wynonna shared that growing up, she and Ashley were very different, and the only thing they had in common was a missing father and a shared mother. “We don't communicate nor do we spend time together,” Wynonna said at the time. “And that's a long history of being apart. I was away from Ashley at age 18. She was 14. And I think at 14, Ashley became independent of the family. I think out of necessity.” The “No One Else on Earth” singer added that when they were young, Ashley saw her as a mother figure, which was difficult for Wynonna, who wanted to have more of a sisterly role. “She called me Sister Mommy and I really had a hard time with that,” she said. “Because I was like, ‘I don't want to be your mommy. I want to be your sister.’ But the way life was, I was famous at 18. I wasn't there for her prom. I wasn't there as a sister.” Wynonna and Ashley shared a farm with their mother Wynonna Judd, Ashley Judd and Naomi Judd pose for a portrait during Ashley's movie premiere circa 1996 in Los Angeles, California. Ron Davis/Getty All of the Judd women lived on the same family farm in Nashville for some time before Naomi died. In 2016, Naomi gave Oprah a tour of the property, sharing that Ashley lived a one-minute car ride from her front door while Wynonna was six minutes away. Naomi purchased the property in 1995 and called it “Peaceful Valley.” Both of her daughters lived over the hill, with Wynonna moving to the area with her two children, Elijah and Grace, in 2012. They had different relationships with Naomi throughout their lives Naomi Judd with her daughters Ashley Judd and Wynonna Judd on the red carpet during the annual YouthAIDS Benefit Gala on September 14, 2005 in Washington, D.C. Chris Greenberg/Getty When Wynonna was 18, she became part of the duo The Judds with her mom, and the two embarked on tours together, producing six albums in their time before Wynonna went solo. However, after their last tour in 2010, Wynonna and her mother had a falling out and stopped speaking. “We've been together more than we've not,” she told Rather. “So it's really strange to go about this professionally. She's my mom. And we just don't talk.” Naomi reflected on her relationship with both daughters in an interview with ABC News in 2016, sharing that she and Ashley had an easier time because they were more alike. “Ashley and I are so stinkin' much alike,” she said. “I mean we have the same mannerisms. We both read a whole lot. We both love new places. I mean there's such similarities.” She added that with Wynonna, things could be difficult sometimes because she was the first child, so Naomi admitted to making some mistakes while raising her. “From the day I knew she existed, it was the two of us against the world and then through the decades we kind of grew up together, 'cause it was really just the two of us,” she said. “And I'm always tellin' her, ‘If I'd known better, I would have done better.’ ” Naomi added, “So Wy bore the brunt of all of the mistakes I made and we talk about 'em. We've been through a lot of therapy together.” Wynonna helped Ashley recover after she shattered her leg Ashley Judd and Wynonna Judd arrive to the Youth Aids Benefit held at Capitale, New York City. Brian ZAK/Gamma-Rapho/Getty In 2021, Ashley had a serious accident when she broke her leg after tripping in a forest in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, landing her in the ICU. The recovery process was long and arduous, leaving Ashley in a cast for some time. She reached out to her older sister to help her with day-to-day tasks — including washing her hair. "Therein lies the job of a big sister right there,” Wynonna told Page Six in March 2021. "She said, 'I have a request. Can you wash my hair?' I said, 'Sure,' so I'm looking up ways to wash someone's hair lying down." They put rumors they were feuding to rest after the death of their mom Ashley Judd and Wynonna Judd speak onstage during Naomi Judd: 'A River Of Time' Celebration on May 15, 2022 in Nashville, Tennessee. Mickey Bernal/Getty After Naomi died, rumors swirled that Wynonna and Ashley were fighting over her estate and will. However, Wynonna put those to bed when she told PEOPLE in October 2022 that there’s “no argument” between the sisters. "Someone told me while I was at Ashley's house, 'Hey, did you know that they're saying this about you?' I went, 'Huh? I'm fighting with Ashley? Oh. Again?' " she said. "Fighting over what? I have such a great life. Ashley has a great life. Why would we be fighting over the will?" She added that her mother’s death only brought her and Ashley closer as they supported each other. "I feel like we're connected in a way that is so different because I'm an orphan," Wynonna said. "Both my parents are gone, and I'm relying on Ashley. She's relying on me in a different way that's about compassion. It's not about being successful and smart and capable. It's about, 'I love you.' 'I love you, too.' We're vulnerable with each other, and we're tender." The singer said that a life coach helped the sisters find a way to “communication, compromise and compassion,” leading her relationship with Ashley to become the “most powerful” in her life. "Ashley and I are very different people, and we are learning that we have more in common than we don't," she said. "That's really interesting, because when you're younger, you think there's more disconnect. We had a really deep conversation the other day, and we got through it and nobody got hurt." Ashley echoed similar sentiments on the Healing with David Kessler podcast a few months earlier, sharing that though they were in different stages of their grieving process, they still found ways to bond and show up for each other. "Sister came over yesterday and spent the day with me and spent the night and we talked about mom, we talked about social issues," she said. "She gave me a foot rub and she's in a pretty different place than I am right now. And we don't have to be congruent in order to have compassion for each other and I think that that's a really important grace that family members can hopefully learn to give each other." Close