Chrissy Teigen and John Legend Discuss the "Spectacular" Drinks They Had After the Golden Globes

As always, this couple had a blast

By Seija Rankin Feb 09, 2015 12:18 AMTags
Chrissy Teigen, John Legend, Grammy's, CouplesChristopher Polk/WireImage

John Legend and Chrissy Teigen continue to prove that they're one of the most fun-loving couples in Hollywood.

The always adorable twosome stopped by the Grammys red carpet to show off their charming sides once again. And naturally, the conversation immediately turned to booze. 

Ryan Seacrest unearthed a clip of the couple in E!'s backstage one-on-one room at this year's Golden Globes, that showed Teigen helping herself to the open bar. But there was just one problem—the bar was actually a prop!

"I thought it was Watch What Happens Live!" joked Teigen, referring to Bravo's Andy Cohen-hosted talk show in which guests typically imbibe in cocktails during interviews. "I was like, my goodness. I thought it was a bar! But, it was real liquor—ask John."

"We had real drinks," confirmed Legend. "It was delicious, it was spectacular."

We think it's safe to say that these two always have a blast. But John also took some time to open up about several major performances—starting with his groundbreaking rendition of "All of Me" at last year's Grammys.

"It was special," said Legend. "It made the song get to No. 1...that night it went from, like, number 54 to No. 3 on iTunes and it just stayed in the top five after that. I don't think it would have happened like that without the Grammys."

Watch: Tiegen and Legend Talk Boozing Up at Golden Globes

The singer also tackled a slightly nervewracking performance last week, singing "America the Beautiful" at the Super Bowl.

"It was cool, but it went by so fast," he admitted. "By the time I was just getting into it, it was over already." 

And the singer copped to feeling the pressure a little bit.

"It's easier to do my own songs that I've been doing on tour and stuff," he admitted. "When you do something you don't normally do in front of 100 million people, it's kind of a lot."