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a vicious, vulnerable and victorious comeback
Music

Lily Allen takes shot at David Harbour with ‘Madeline’ Halloween costume

by jummy84 November 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Lily Allen has taken a shot at her ex-partner David Harbour by wearing a ‘Madeline’ costume for Halloween.

The singer-songwriter released her first album in seven years, ‘West End Girl’, last week (October 24), and she has confirmed that her split from the Stranger Things star was a major source of inspiration for the songs on the record.

One song in particular has been identified as central to the theme of the break-up with Harbour – ‘Madeline’ sees her construct a fictional character who Allen implies had an affair with Harbour, and in the song, she reads out what appears to be a voice note from Madeline to the actor. “I can’t trust anything that comes out of your mouth / I’m not convinced that he didn’t fuck you in our house,” she sings.

Now, Allen has taken another swipe at Harbour by dressing up as the children’s book character Madeleine, the young girl living at a Paris boarding school from the 1939 novel of the same name by Ludwig Bemelmans.

Lily Allen as Madeline for Halloween. pic.twitter.com/NDNSDjAXR6

— Pop Crave (@PopCrave) November 1, 2025

She appeared at a Halloween party in the Chateau Marmont in Los Angeles dressed from head to toe as the character, with a blue coat, red neckerchief, straw hat and bright orange wig.

Since the album’s release, a woman named Natalie Tippett has come forward claiming to be the woman that was having an affair with Harbour. She told the Mail on Sunday: “Of course I’ve heard the song. But I have a family and things to protect. I have a two-and-a-half-year-old daughter, and I understand this is going on. It’s a little bit scary for me.”

Despite her claims, Allen insisted in an interview with The Sunday Times that the song ‘Madeline’ is a fictional character who is a “construct of others”.

News of Allen’s separation from Harbour arose towards the start of the year, amid rumours that there was cheating on the Stranger Things star’s part. Earlier this year, Allen revealed that she went into a treatment centre to deal with the “emotional turmoil” of the split.

‘West End Girl’ was given a four-star review from NME, and praised as “a sleek, smart collection that sees Allen back at her very best”.

“As you’d expect from her most ‘vulnerable’ album, there’s a lot of grief and misery across ‘West End Girl’, but it never sounds depressing,” it read. “Since ‘Smile’, Allen’s always had a knack for making devastation sound exciting.

“There’s rage behind the pulsating ‘Ruminating’ as she struggles with the realities of an open marriage, playful other woman anthem ‘Madeline’ is a dizzying cocktail of uncertainty, fury and empathy, while the gorgeous ‘Just Enough’ is as crushing as it gets, heartbreak amplified by lush strings. It feels like a much-needed purge.”

This week, Allen announced her first tour in seven years – she will play ‘West End Girl’ in full at a run of “specially-chosen” theatres across the UK in March, culminating with two nights at London’s Palladium. See all the dates here and find tickets here from November 7.

November 2, 2025 0 comments
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Lily Allen - Madeline Song Lyrics | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

Lily Allen – Madeline Song Lyrics | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Song Name – Madeline
Singer – Lily Allen

Check out Madeline Song Lyrics by Lily Allen

I know none of this is your fault, messaging you feels kind of assaultive
Saw your text, that’s how I found out, tell me the truth and his motives
I can’t trust anything that comes out of his mouth
No, I can’t trust anything that comes out of his mouth

How long has it been going on? Is it just sex or is there emotion?
He told me it would stay in hotel rooms, never be out in the open
Why would I trust anything that comes out of his mouth?
Oh, why would I trust anything that comes out of his mouth?

We had an arrangement
Be discreet and don’t be blatant
There had to be payment
It had to be with strangers
But you’re not a stranger, Madeline

Hey, he is telling you thе truth (Madeline)
Our relationship has only еver been about sex
I can promise you that this is not an emotional connection (Madeline)
We don’t speak outside of the time we spend together (Madeline)
And whenever he talks about you, it’s with the utmost respect

You tell me he’s telling the truth, is that the case or a line that he fed you?
Wanna believe you, but is it a ruse? Lie to me, babe, and I’ll end you
I can’t trust anything that comes out of your mouth
I’m not convinced that he didn’t fuck you in our house

Do you two ever talk about me? Has he told you that he doesn’t love me?
I bet he tells you, tells you he loves you, I’ve gotten old, gotten ugly
I wouldn’t trust anything that comes out of his mouth
Now why would you trust anything that comes out of his mouth?

We had an arrangement (An arrangement)
Be discreet and don’t be blatant (Blatant)
And there had to be payment (Payment)
It had to be with strangers (Strangers)
But you’re not a stranger, Madeline
Madeline, Madeline, Madeline
But you’re not a stranger, Madeline

I hate that you’re in so much pain right now
I really don’t wanna be the cause of any upset
He told me that you were aware this was going on and that he had your full consent
If he’s lying about that, then please let me know
Because I have my own feelings about dishonesty
Lies are not something that I wanna get caught up in
You can reach out to me any time, by the way
If you need any more details or you just need to vent or anything
Love and light, Madeline

November 1, 2025 0 comments
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Lily Allen and David Harbour: A Complete Breakup Timeline
Fashion

Lily Allen and David Harbour: A Complete Breakup Timeline

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Unfortunately, a little more than four years later, it looks like the couple is calling it quits. So, here is our timeline of the (rather drawn-out) Lily Allen and David Harbour separation, starting with most recent events.

October 28, 2025: The New York City townhouse referenced in West End Girl, and which became famous after Allen and Harbour’s 2023 Architectural Digest tour, is listed for sale, per NME.

October 25, 2025: The real identity of “Madeline” is revealed. In the song, “Madeline,” Allen accuses Harbour of having an affair with a woman called Madeline, which broke their agreement for the terms of the open marriage. In an interview with the Daily Mail, Natalie Tippett, a costume designer on Stranger Things, confirmed that she is the real Madeline.

October 24, 2025: Allen surprise drops her first album in seven years, West End Girl, and it is full of intimate details from her marriage and breakup. In the lyrics, Allen describes the couple’s open relationship and her feelings about it, as well as her sense of betrayal when Harbour (allegedly) broke the rules they had set for their relationship together. In one of the album’s most revealing tracks, “Pussy Palace,” she describes finding a plastic bag of sex toys, lube, and condoms under Harbour’s bed. “Duane Reade bag with the handles tied/Sex toys, butt plugs, lube inside/Hundreds of Trojans, you’re so fucking broken,” she sings.

Allen told Interview, “I wrote this record in 10 days in December and I feel very differently about the whole situation now. We all go through breakups and it’s always fucking brutal.”

February 4, 2025: People reports that multiple sources have confirmed that Allen and Harbour split. “Her marriage has been crumbling and they have split,” the source claimed. However, neither Allen nor Harbour has given a statement directly. Another source tells People Allen is “devastated and not in a good place.”

January 9, 2025: Allen alludes to going through difficult times on an episode of her podcast, Miss Me? “I’m finding it hard to be interested in anything. I’m really not in a good place,” she says. “I know I’ve been talking about it for months, but I’ve been spiraling and spiraling. It’s got out of control. I’ve tried.” Amid the divorce rumors already swirling, this was seen as further evidence that there was a split on the horizon.

October 29, 2025 0 comments
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Lily Allen Says She Has Moved on From David Harbour Heartbreak
Music

Lily Allen Says She Has Moved on From David Harbour Heartbreak

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Although Lily Allen‘s evocative new album, West End Girl, reflects on the unraveling of her marriage to Stranger Things actor David Harbour, the singer confirmed she doesn’t still feel “confused or angry” about the situation.

In a conversation with Mel Ottenberg for Interview magazine, Allen explained that her album isn’t about getting back at her ex. Ottenberg asked of the LP, “Should we call it a revenge tour?”

“It isn’t,” Allen replied. “I mean, I wrote this record in 10 days in December and I feel very differently about the whole situation now. We all go through breakups and it’s always fucking brutal. But I don’t think it’s that often that you feel inclined to write about it while you’re in it.”

She added, “That’s what’s fun about this record; it’s viscerally like going through the motions. At the time, I was really trying to process things and that’s great in terms of the album, but I don’t feel confused or angry now. I don’t need revenge.”

The singer explained that some of West End Girl is “based on truth and some of it is fantasy.” She explained, “It’s not a cruel album. I don’t feel like I’m being mean. It was just the feelings I was processing at the time.”

Ottenberg asked how she managed to get out of a broken heart. “I think it’s just getting out and socializing,” she said. “I’m guilty of putting all of it on one person when I’m in a relationship. So when that person leaves, I feel completely bereft and it takes me a while to be like, ‘Actually, I can rely on friends for some of this stuff as well.’”

Allen also admitted to being on dating apps following her breakup from Harbour, which she said was difficult to do as a woman in the public eye. “They’re awful, especially if you’re going through heartbreak,” she noted. “There is nothing more depressing than hundreds of people that are nothing like the person that you’re missing. … I’m not really looking to go out with another famous person.”

She said she was actually banned from Hinge “for impersonating myself,” but she is still on Raya. Allen added that she is currently not dating anyone specific. “I’m not in a relationship, but there are some people that I meet up with,” she said.

Trending Stories

Allen and Harbour married in 2020. West End Girl marks her first new album in seven years, following 2018’s No Shame. It features 14 tracks recorded in Los Angeles over 10 days with her music director Blue May late last year before completing it between New York and London.

“The record is vulnerable in a way that my music perhaps hasn’t been before – certainly not over the course of a whole album,” Allen said in a statement, adding, “I’ve used shared experiences as the basis for songs which try to delve into why we humans behave as we do, so the record is a mixture of fact and fiction which I hope serves as a reminder of how stoic yet also how frail we humans can be. In that respect I think it’s very much an album about the complexities of relationships and how we all navigate them.”

October 29, 2025 0 comments
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Lily Allen's 'West End Girl' Is a Stunning Divorce Album: Review
TV & Streaming

Lily Allen’s ‘West End Girl’ Is a Stunning Divorce Album: Review

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Out of the many thousands — surely tens of thousands — of albums I’ve listened to in my time, I can’t recall one that had me on the edge of my seat from the first moments to the last on first listen the way Lily Allen’s new “West End Girl” did, almost as if it were a suspense movie. The tension doesn’t come in wondering about where the record’s narrative is ultimately headed; as you may have heard, this is a divorce record with a capital D. My inability to sit back in my chair came from just savoring every confessional line and wondering what the hell she was going to tell us in the next one to top it. It’s the pleasure of listening to a master storyteller who makes your jaw drop by seeming to have spilled all the tea almost at the outset, and then the tea just keeps on coming. Not since Boston in 1773, maybe, has anyone dumped it this massively, or this fulfillingly.

If that sounds a little hyperbolic, well, sure. But “West End Girl” is the kind of record that can inspire crazy superlatives. It’s not solely about the candor — although if all Allen did was read like-minded passages of her diary aloud, you’d still have to give the album some points. It’s not just what she says from moment to moment but how she says it that keeps you riveted. And that applies on fifth, sixth and seventh listen, too, however well you’ve absorbed the story beats. The level of pop craftsmanship remains superb throughout, too, in 14 songs that somehow manage to keep the emotions feeling utterly raw at every turn, even as the music itself is anything but.

So: Come for the shock value, and stay for the high level of craftsmanship. Then stay even longer for how cannily the album sustains its mix of droll delivery and pure heartbreak. It’s a place you’ll probably want to linger.

There have been a lot of powerful divorce albums in recent years: Already in 2025, we had Jason Isbell’s and Amanda Shires’ both-sides-now releases, plus Maren Morris’ roman-a-clef set. Going back further, we’ve had Adele’s “30,” Kacey Musgraves’ “Star Crossed” and the Chicks’ “Gaslighter,” and the divorce-court near-miss that was Beyonce’s “Lemonade,” not to mention non-marital laments like Taylor Swift’s “The Tortured Poets Department.” What all those albums had in common was how those artists offered at least occasional time-outs from the trauma. Usually the artist will feel obligated to give the audience a breather with at least a couple songs that deal with something other than the central rupture, or which flash forward to assure everyone that the singer is doing all right and healing up, thank you, post-split.

But there will be no such commercial breaks or reassurances about time’s healing power for Allen. These 14 songs never offer the slightest relief from the intense emotionality of the breakdown of her relationship. But they’re so uniformly good, the fact that she doesn’t stray for a second from the subject of straying and its effects, but holds onto it like a dog with a bone, is… well, it’s a relief, actually. Allen has been working as a stage actress lately, on London’s West End (hence the title), and listening to the album one fell swoop at a time is like immersing yourself in a terrific one-woman show, where she’s running through the demise of a dream marriage in something that feels like real time. If you’re not riveted by all of this, you may not even be rivet-able.

Released with only a few days’ warning, “West End Girl” has already prompted scores of headlines in the U.K., where Allen remains a paparazzi-attracting A-lister, and just a few less in the U.S., where she is revered by most of the pop intellgentsia but has been known to walk down the street unaccosted. It doesn’t hurt, as far as intense public curiosity goes, that she was just divorced from “Stranger Things” actor David Harbour, after five years of marriage that apparently started as a fairy-tale romance for her and ended in the devastation strewn throughout every track on the album. We say “apparently” because Allen did suggest in a British Vogue interview that there’s at least a little fiction mixed in with the blatant autobiography. But every lyrical detail is so vividly delineated — in a “she probably wouldn’t make this up” way — that, rightly or wrongly, you’re likely to walk away thinking that possibly the only thing fabricated from whole cloth is the pseudonym she came up with for the story’s principal mistress (“Madeline”).

The album gets off to a blithe enough start… for a couple of verses. The title track is styled initially as a kind of samba, with Allen breathlessly reeling off how she and her husband moved to a brownstone in New York: “Found ourselves a good mortgage / Billy Cotton got sorted.” (Cotton is the designer who made the couple’s new digs worthy of a much-talked-about home-tour profile in Architectural Digest in 2023.) All is bliss until Allen tells her husband in the tune that she had just landed a leading role in a London play, presumably referencing her award-nominated breakout role in “2:22 – A Ghost Story.” (She subsequently starred on the West End again this year, in “Hedda.”) “That’s when your demeanour started to change,” she sings. “You said I’d have to audition / I said, ‘You’re deranged’ / And I thought that that was quite strange.” And there, two minutes in, with 42 left to go, end the sum total of the album’s sunny moments. Halfway through this title track, the music suddenly changes, turning to a creepily underwater-sounding version of that electro-samba, as the backdrop to a phone call we hear only Allen’s side of, in which her partner delivers some unknown bad news from the other side of the pond. It’s up to the listener to imagine what’s being said on the other end of the line: Is he telling her he’s moving out for good? Or just moving to another state, or getting his own flat in town (all of which will factor in in songs that come later)? All she can think of to say back is a dumbstuck “It makes me really sad but… I’m fine, I just want you to be happy… I love you.” And with that, the dream is over. Even though the album is just getting started.

She saves the discovery of infidelity for track 2, “Ruminating” (and practically every track thereafter). This one is a delectable slice of hyperpop, paced to keep up with the racing thoughts that keep our heroine awake at 4 a.m.: “I’m not hateful but you make me hate her / She gets to sleep next to my medicator… / And I can’t shake the image of her naked / On top of you, and I’m disassociated.” She repeats a statement of her partner’s — “If it (casual sex) has to happen, baby, do you want to know?” —answering back, ad nauseum, “What a fucking line, line, line,” repeated endlessly in a lovely, profane, Autotune-enhanced vocal cascade.

“Sleepwalking” brings some sweetness back to the album, but only in the ironic music, which uses the cadences of a sweet girl-group ballad from the ‘50s or early ‘60s top underscore a bitter lyric that says: “Who said romance isn’t dead? / Been no romance since we wed / ‘Why aren’t we fucking baby?’ / Yeah, that’s what you said / But you let me think it was me in my head / And nothing to do with them girls in your bed.” Allen says she’s become the madonna in her marriage when she’d eagerly play whore, if only. (Freud’s interpolation there goes uncredited.)

In “Tennis,” deceptively cheerful couplets that are divided up by light banging on a single piano key, she sings about how his abrupt grabbing back of his phone caused her to take a look at his texts, revealing that he’s been exchanging volleys on the court with a mystery woman, which in her mind may count as the more unforgivable infidelity: “If it was just sex, I wouldn’t be jealous / (But) you won’t play with me,” she sings — and then the music drops out for a blunt spoken-word inquiry: “And who’s Madeline?” (Soon to be drolly repeated and amended as: “Who the fuck is Madeline?”) In one of the great segues of our time, the next number is actually titled “Madeline,” and it’s there that Allen gathers the moxy to text the pseudonymous woman — and, for our listening pleasure, recites the answers that get texted back to her in an amusinglyu authentic American accent. (Whether she’s quoting real-life texts verbatim or paraphrasing for comedic effect is hard to know, but the end result is a dialogue that feels satirical and real at the same time.)

It’s so easy to become wrapped up in what’s actually being sung and said in “Madeline” that you might miss what’s happening musically, on first listen. The instrumental bed for this track focuses on a kind of acoustic guitar strumming that feels faintly redolent of a Marty Robbins ballad about Western gunslingers in a showdown — and yeah, that does become a bit more obvious when a couple of actual gunshot sound effects are eventually thrown into the mix.

It’s not the only time stylistic pastiche is employed for humor. It happens again, for instance, in “Dallas Major,” a song about Allen reentering the dating scene against her better judgment. That one brings in a light R&B groove that is meant to confer a surface sexiness, even as Allen warns a possible suitor, “I’m almost nearly 40 / I’m just shy of five-foot-two / I’m a mum to teenage children / Does that sound like fun to you?” Well, it does, kind of, but only because primary producer Blue May and his cohorts are adding bits of funk guitar, ‘70s-style keyboards and even some ‘80s-style scratching, while Allen conversely laments, over and over: “I hate it here.” If you don’t notice all these fairly subtle arrangement touchs on the first couple of listens, it’s understandable — you are busy being hit by a 2-by-4, which is to say, the accumulative effect of Allen’s jaw-dropper divulgements.

In “Madeline,” the “it’s complicated” part of the story really starts to take effect. There we learn the rules of the game of the marriage: It’s an open one, but Allen posits that she’s only agreeing to that to keep the embers of her former fairy-tale union alive. It’s here that she may lose some listeners who would otherwise be down to empathize with a straightforward divorce album: If you agreed to an open marriage, why are you so outraged he had sex with other women? The singer establishes there were boundaries set: “We had an arrangement / Be discreet, and don’t be blatant / There had to be payment / It had to be with strangers… [Dramatic pause.] But you’re not a stranger, Madeline.”

The magnitude of the extramarital exploits is stressed in an unforgettable sing-along that soon follows, “Pussy Palace.” In this one, the narrator goes to drop off medication at the West Village apartment her husband is keeping on his own, to discover a shoebox of love letters from serial lovers and a “Duane Reade bag with the handles tied / Sex toys, butt plugs, lube inside / Hundreds of Trojans, you’re so fucking broken / How’d I get caught up in your double life?” If that sounds stressful, know that the chorus is actually the kind of earworm you may spend the fall singing out loud — “I didn’t know it was your pussy palace (x4) / I always thought it was a dojo (x3) / So am I looking at a sex addict (x4)?” (It’s pretty much guaranteed, by the way, that with this album Merriam-Webster look-ups on dojo just went up 10,000%.)

The musical dynamics of the record are fairly spectacular. At its tenderest, there is “Just Enough,” a ballad with finger-picking guitar and orchestra that has Allen caught up in seeing herself as a hag: “Look at my reflection / I feel so drawn, so old / I booked myself a facelift / Wondering how long it might hold / I gave you all my power / How I’m seen through your eyes…” It’s one of the few songs on the album that is universal enough that many women will presumably relate — although, again, she can’t resist bringing it home to some triggering specifics when she asks aloud: “Why are we here talking about vasectomies?”

Contrast that with the wildly up-tempo tune that immediately precedes it, “Nonmonogamummy.” (Best tongue-twister of a title for a great pop song since “Femininomenon.”) In this one, Allen has reluctantly given in to keeping her side of the marriage open and is working the apps herself, in frustration. Her date for the evening is a British DJ named Specialist Moss, who raps, “I look at your eyes, you say your heart is broken,” while Allen can’t stop thinking about her husband: “I don’t want to fuck with anyone else / I know that’s all you want to do / I’m so committed that I’d lose myself / Because I don’t want to lose you.” The date goes badly, but the song goes spectacularly. An irresistible electric guitar line and an unbeatably furious beat help Allen and Blue May make “Nonmonogamummy” into what may be the most brilliant banger of the year.

Much respect, also, for “Relapse,” in which Allen, who is apparently about five years sober, writes about how the breakdown of her personal life and dreams is driving her to want to drink, or drug — but expresses this hunger not as some kind of slog but as a delicious piece of dubstep.

For an album that proceeds quite deliberately as a narrative, “West End Girl” doesn’t have a terribly definitive wrap-up. In the finale, “Fruityloop” (seemingly named for her ex’s choice of cereal, as well as the snare-drum loop that underlies the track), Allen brings the fatal attraction down to unresolved parental-neglect issues: “You’re just a little boy, looking for his mummy… / Playing with his toys, he just wants attention / He can’t really do attachment, scared he’s gonna be abandoned.” For herself, “I’m just a little girl, looking for a daddy / Thought that we could break the cycle.” If that sounds like pretty reasonable, even high-minded after all that has preceded it, rest assured that Allen is not quite done with the tough talk yet. “You’re a mess, I’m a bitch,” she proclaims. Magnanimous, sort of, but then she can’t help finally quoting the sage that was Lily Allen, circa 2008: “It’s not me, it’s you.”

If her deep woundedness comes as a bit of a surprise on this album, it may be because cockier older songs like “F— You” gave her the image of a tough broad, or because she already had one divorce album, 2017’s “No Shame,” in which she seemed to take a lot of responsibility for her first marriage’s failure. So among the many things that feel shocking here is just how submissive she seems to her mate’s will and wishes, up to a breaking point. The picture painted is of a wife who’s a true lovestruck romantic, and maybe even,  aspirationally, a tradwife. There’s an interesting contrast here, between the Allen who might be seen by some as a ball-buster for how candidly she’s laying out her anger for the world to see here, and the Lily who is — like a globetrotting woman before her — just a girl, standing in front of a boy, asking him to love her. (Even for a while after she’s learned what minefields his phone and his Duane Reade bag are.) For all of the avenging spirit that animates a good part of this album, it’s tremendously touching, when she’s not turning up the pyro. Or even when she is.

For now, it’s enough that we have her back with an album-of-the-year contender. (Extra kudos to Blue May, who is not really a famous name among producers yet, but is probably about to become one, based on this.) But is this the beginning of a renaissance — a Lily-sance? — after she spent eight years off the recording scene? It’s not as if whole generations of women haven’t followed in the footsteps she set down more than 20 years ago, yet it still feels like we need her now more than ever.

Allen has said she was indeed recording prolifically in the lead-up to the domestic drama detailed here, but not releasing those tracks because she felt she was writing too impersonally, putting down her thoughts about the internet and stuff like that. You’d hate to think it would take this much trauma for her to follow up with another great album. (Here’s betting those unreleased songs about the worldwide web are not as bad as she thinks they are, right?) Anyway, we are just a world, standing in front of a girl, asking her to make more records.

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Lily Allen discovered ‘f****** massive lump’ on her right breast after cosmetic surgery earlier this year
Celebrity News

Lily Allen discovered ‘f****** massive lump’ on her right breast after cosmetic surgery earlier this year

by jummy84 October 22, 2025
written by jummy84

22 October 2025

Lily Allen discovered a “f****** massive lump” on her right breast after undergoing cosmetic surgery earlier this year.

Lily Allen discovered a ‘f****** massive lump’ on her right breast after undergoing cosmetic surgery earlier this year

The 40-year-old singer discussed her recent breast augmentation and the events surrounding it in an interview with Perfect Magazine, saying she underwent the surgery in February, following her separation from actor David Harbour, 50, after four years of marriage – but reassured fans medical tests confirmed the growth is not cancerous.

Asked how she felt about the procedure, Lily said: “Good, although I have got a f****** massive lump in my right boob. I think it must be a cyst. Yeah. It’s not dangerous. I went to have a mammogram and an ultrasound in New York last week and it came back OK.”

She added her decision to have surgery was linked to changes in her body and weight loss during a difficult period.

Lily said: “I felt like it. No, actually, you know what it was? It was that I got really, really thin when I was feeling at my lowest, in the past year or so. Or longer, actually.

“And I knew that I had to gain weight. And I’ve always been bottom-heavy and so I had a fear that if I was to gain weight, my body would feel out of proportion.

“And so I felt like, why not gift myself a get-out clause? Make it feel more enticing.”

In March, Lily described her operation as “incredible” and said she had been buying new lingerie to celebrate her body.

Speaking on her Miss Me? podcast with friend Miquita Oliver, she joked about the contrast between her breasts and her face. She said: “They look really incredible when I take my top off, and my bra off, but there’s definitely a contrast in age between my breasts and my face.

“I’m like 40, 18, 40, 18. I’m just thinking ‘maybe I get the BBL next’. I quite want the bum.”

Discussing recovery, Lily said: “There’s a thing that happens a few months after you get them which is they drop and fluff. So they’re still quite high and they’re still quite hard.

“When they drop and fluff they feel like normal boobs. So I haven’t got to drop and fluff yet, I’m very much looking forward to that.”

She continued: “I feel like it’s really fun. I’m buying fancy lingerie that my boobs can actually fit in and taking pictures on my phone. Haven’t sent them to anyone yet, but it will hopefully get there at some point. On my 40th birthday I’m going to drop and fluff.”

Lily’s comments come as she prepares to release her first album in seven years, West End Girl, written after her separation from David.

She said the record, released under her new deal with BMG, explores her life in a new city and the aftermath of the split.




October 22, 2025 0 comments
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Lily Allen Releasing First New Album in 7 Years, West End Girl, This Week
Music

Lily Allen Releasing First New Album in 7 Years, West End Girl, This Week

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Lily Allen has announced her first album in seven years: West End Girl is out this Friday, October 24, via BMG. Its 14 songs were mostly written by Allen and her musical director, Blue May, and the pair executive-produced the LP alongside Seb Chew and Kito. Below, check out Spanish artist Nieves González’s cover art.

In a press release, Allen said, “I’m nervous. The record is vulnerable in a way that my music perhaps hasn’t been before—certainly not over the course of a whole album. I’ve tried to document my life in a new city and the events that led me to where I am in my life now. At the same time, I’ve used shared experiences as the basis for songs which try to delve into why we humans behave as we do, so the record is a mixture of fact and fiction which I hope serves as a reminder of how stoic yet also how frail we humans can be. In that respect I think it’s very much an album about the complexities of relationships and how we all navigate them. It’s a story…”

Since her last album, 2018’s No Shame, Allen has appeared in various West End London theater productions and co-founded the podcast Miss Me.

© Jose Albornoz

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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Lily Allen ‘describing herself as recovering addict and raging codependent in new Raya profile’
Celebrity News

Lily Allen ‘describing herself as recovering addict and raging codependent in new Raya profile’

by jummy84 September 29, 2025
written by jummy84

29 September 2025

Lily Allen has reportedly described herself as a “recovering addict” and “raging codependent” on the celebrity dating app Raya.

Lily Allen has reportedly described herself as a ‘recovering addict’ and ‘raging codependent’ on the celebrity dating app Raya

The singer, 40, is said to have returned to the platform following her split from actor David Harbour, 50, which ended last year after she allegedly discovered he was hunting for women online.

A source told the Daily Mail: “Lily is advertising herself as a) recovering addict and raging codependent (on Raya.”

An insider also told the outlet about Lily allegedly discovering David searching for women on the celebrity dating app while they were married: “Lily (signed up and) was looking for women that were on Raya and cross-referencing them with women David follows on Instagram to try to figure out who he was seeing.”

Her new Raya profile reportedly includes a photograph of her in black see-through lingerie, alongside the tagline introducing herself with the candid confession.

Lily and David married in 2020 but separated in 2023, with their divorce finalised in 2024.

Last month, Lily confirmed she had moved out of the New York townhouse she shared with David and was now redecorating a new home in west London, an ex-council flat where she will live with her two daughters.

The Smile singer has also been spotted dating since her separation.

In the summer she was seen at a London music festival with actor James Norton.

But their meeting did not develop further, as James was later seen at Glastonbury with stylist Flora Huddart.

Lily has spoken openly in the past about her struggles with addiction and co-dependency.

The singer – whose dad is actor Keith Allen and brother is Game of Thrones actor Alfie – rose to fame with her 2006 debut album Alright, Still, which featured hits such as Smile and LDN.

Known for her sharp lyrics and eclectic style, she followed with the chart-topping It’s Not Me, It’s You in 2009.

After a brief hiatus, she returned with Sheezus (2014) and No Shame (2018), the latter nominated for the Mercury Prize.

Beyond music, Lily has acted on stage, most notably in the West End play 2:22 A Ghost Story.

She is also recognised for her outspoken views and memoir My Thoughts Exactly.




September 29, 2025 0 comments
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Lily James in a Bland Tinder Streaming Movie
TV & Streaming

Lily James in a Bland Tinder Streaming Movie

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

James plays Tinder co-founder and eventual Bumble entrepreneur Whitney Wolfe Herd in a glossy TV movie that plays like you-go-girl agitprop, and without the wit or filmmaking craft of the only social networking biodrama that was so far actually good.

September 21, 2025 0 comments
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Lily James Wore the New Prada It Shoes of Fall 2025
Fashion

Lily James Wore the New Prada It Shoes of Fall 2025

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

As a fashion editor, shoe lover, and big Prada fan, the sight of a celebrity wearing a new Prada It shoe completely stops me in my tracks. So when I saw that Lily James just wore a shoe that was the star of Prada’s F/W 25 runway, I couldn’t not share my sighting with the internet.

James was photographed out and about in Manhattan this week for press appearances, wearing head-to-toe Prada (lucky girl). Her outfit consisted of a chestnut belted leather jacket and a matching miniskirt with a white Galleria bag and the It shoes in question: Prada’s Antiqued Leather Pumps with exposed seams, a pointed toe, and an elegant bow detail. The weathered effect of the leather gives them a vintage look, and all of the unique details combined make for a non-basic, cool-girl pump. The pumps (one of several weathered leather shoes in Prada’s F/W 25 collection) come in chalk white (James’ pick), a mid-town brown, and brownish black. It’s one of those shoes that may be an It shoe this season, but it’s timeless enough to have in your wardrobe for years to come. And at $1.5k, the longevity factor is certainly good news.

Keep scrolling to see the new Prada It shoes on Lily James and on the F/W 25 runway, and shop them for yourself while they’re still in stock (because trust me—Prada It shoes always sell out).

On Lily James

(Image credit: Aeon/GC Images/Getty Images)

Lily James in NYC wearing a Prada brown leather jacket and skirt with Prada cream Antiqued Leather Pumps

(Image credit: Aeon/GC Images/Getty Images)

On Lily James: Prada Bonded Nappa Leather Jacket ($7400), Nappa Leather Mini Skirt ($3300), Galleria Small Saffiano Leather Bag ($4500) and Exposed Seam Kitten Heel Pumps in Talco ($1450)

On the Prada F/W 25 Runway

Prada F/W 25 runway, Antiqued Leather Pumps

(Image credit: Launchmetrics Spotlight)

Prada F/W 25 runway, Antiqued Leather Pumps

(Image credit: Launchmetrics Spotlight)

Prada F/W 25 runway, Antiqued Leather Pumps

(Image credit: Launchmetrics Spotlight)

Prada F/W 25 runway, Antiqued Leather Pumps

(Image credit: Launchmetrics Spotlight)

Prada F/W 25 runway, Antiqued Leather Pumps

(Image credit: Launchmetrics Spotlight)

Prada F/W 25 runway, Antiqued Leather Pumps

(Image credit: Launchmetrics Spotlight)

Shop the It Shoes

Exposed Seam Kitten Heel Pump

Prada

Exposed Seam Kitten Heel Pumps in Talco

Exposed Seam Kitten Heel Pump

Prada

Exposed Seam Kitten Heel Pumps in Cacao

Exposed Seam Kitten Heel Pump

Prada

Exposed Seam Kitten Heel Pumps in Nero/Cuoio

Shop More New Prada Shoes For Fall

Exposed Seam Ankle Strap Sandal

Prada

Exposed Seam Ankle Strap Sandal

Leather Loafers

Ruched Mary Jane Slingback Pump

Prada

Ruched Mary Jane Slingback Pumps

Nappa Leather Booties

Prada

Nappa Leather Booties

Leather Block-Heel Loafers

Prada

Leather Block-Heel Loafers