“Wife for life,” Nicola posted on Instagram a year after their wedding. Brooklyn and Nicola Peltz Beckham have publicly documented both their relationship and the fallout with Brooklyn’s family on Instagram.
Photo: Brooklyn Peltz Beckham/Instagram
Traffic was stopped in Palm Beach — an unheard-of inconvenience, according to neighbors. Rolls-Royces, Benzes, and Teslas idled and honked between the hedgerows. Armed security roamed with German shepherds. A golf cart laden with Veuve Clicquot zoomed by. The groom appeared, driving his own cart, a bichon frise slung over one shoulder. The bride was somewhere behind the hedges, being sewn into a custom Valentino gown. It was a sunny Saturday in April 2022, and police were redirecting traffic for a royal wedding without any royals: Local billionaire’s daughter Nicola Peltz was about to marry Brooklyn Beckham, the eldest son of former footballer David Beckham and former Spice Girl Victoria Beckham.
For the occasion, the Peltzes erected three white fairground-size air-conditioned marquee tents along their private beachfront at Montsorrel, their 13-acre neoclassical family compound. During the ceremony, 500 guests gathered as the couple walked down a floating aisle, then stood under a chuppah of white orchids suspended against the blue ocean. It was a luxury fairy tale, perfectly planned and executed — until the vows, when the elderly rabbi called Brooklyn “David.” He stuttered and asked for forgiveness; he was a soccer fan, the rabbi said. He made the mistake only once more before the ceremony was over.
It was, as one witness described it, uncomfortably Oedipal. On the brink of his new life, during his moment in the Florida sun, Brooklyn still couldn’t get away from his dad. When the flub happened, those who could hear it laughed it off, but four years later, this wedding and its attendant slights are the festering wound that led Brooklyn to publicly and spectacularly reject his Beckham forebears. In January, he declared Victoria and David toxic and controlling in a shocking Instagram manifesto. Now each side appears to be leveraging every weapon in its arsenal — publicists, tabloid reporters, Instagram followers, Gordon Ramsay — to control the narrative of an escalating feud, like the Montagues and the Capulets with yachts. Trying to figure out what really happened is impeded by a thicket of NDAs, paid PR, gossip, and warped memories of family drama.
The two dynasties in this saga may seem equally matched. In fact, they are worlds apart: While the Peltzes don’t have the notoriety of their in-laws, they are estimated to be almost three times as rich; their fortune makes the Beckhams look middle class. They have political connections to the elite within the elite. The clash is a distinctly modern parable about the only power sources that matter anymore — money and clout — and which one inevitably wins. At its center is a chronic failson who ironically has never been more famous. “Everybody in Palm Beach is on the Peltz side, obviously,” R. Couri Hay, the society publicist, tells me. “But I’m afraid Brooklyn may have just substituted one daddy for another.”
Brooklyn and Nicola’s wedding in April 2022. Photo: CAMA/MiamiPIXX/BACKGRID; British Vogue.
Brooklyn and Nicola’s wedding in April 2022. Photo: CAMA/MiamiPIXX/BACKGRID; British Vogue.
Even if you don’t know what Brooklyn Beckham does, you know who he is. His name has been in the tabloids ever since his father announced his birth to the press camped out in front of London’s Portland Hospital in 1999. Brooklyn played a key role in the Second Wave of his parents’ careers as they pivoted from pop star and footballer to two of the world’s first influencers. David and Victoria were pioneers of the practice of leveraging one’s personal life in the press, selling their wedding photos to OK! magazine for an unprecedented £1 million the year Brooklyn was born. They reportedly sold his first baby photos and images of his nursery, too. Over the years, the couple kept their names in the tabloids by allowing limited access to their intimate moments — a kind of managed engagement — then using their boosted profiles to sell mountains of products. David in particular mastered the art of sponcon, lending his image over the years to everything from blenders to cologne to frozen fish fingers. His identity and face are so lucrative that he was able to sell a majority stake in his own IP in 2022 for $270 million to a conglomerate called Authentic Brands Group.
The Beckham children — Brooklyn, now 27, was eventually joined by two brothers, Romeo and Cruz, and a sister, Harper — were integral to building the sprawling commercial operation known as Brand Beckham. “ ‘The children, the children’ — it’s such a part of the narrative,” a person who once worked with the family says. “David as a family man, Victoria as a mom.” After their initial surge in popularity, the couple endured a period of backlash in the U.K. press, beginning with David’s alleged infidelity in 2004 and their subsequent move to L.A. in 2007, which cast them as tacky, fame-hungry social strivers. Boosting their image as devoted parents helped them weather the storm and shift attention to their adorable brood. As they expanded their empire, with Victoria starting her eponymous fashion label in 2008 and David helping to found a soccer team in Miami, they were photographed not just on red carpets but on the sidelines of school sports games, at the Big Apple Circus, and shopping at the Grove. Over the years, the Beckhams have continued to showcase their close-knit family life as a way of projecting salt-of-the-earth domestic normalcy. Now they share Instagram Stories of parents and kids dancing together at Christmas in the Cotswolds or cooking pancakes in their London kitchen. When the whole glittering tribe sits in the front row of Victoria’s runway shows, she reliably posts about how much she loves her family — always with double-x kisses — and they repost their admiration back. “Victoria and David love their kids. But there is a reason why Harper is always somewhere near David’s side. That picture works,” the person says. “And they know it.”
Brooklyn’s high-profile role in his family’s fame machine has made him the unfortunate subject of constant comparison to his successful parents, starting from a young age. Reportedly an anxious kid, he had trouble carving out his own lasting Beckham niche. He was let go from the Arsenal football team’s youth training league, unable to reproduce his father’s talent. At only 16, he was hired to shoot a Burberry fragrance campaign; afterward, he released a photography book, What I See, published by Penguin Random House. It received a flare of unkind coverage, particularly one backlit, unfocused photo of an elephant. Then, after David publicly documented dropping him off at Parsons in 2017 as a freshman, he left the program after just one year.
From left: The U.K. premiere of Netflix’s Beckham in 2023. Photo: Gareth Cattermole/Getty ImagesBrooklyn with the Peltz family in December 2025. Brooklyn and Nicola shared images of their holidays in 2025, which they chose to spend with the Peltzes instead of the Beckhams. Photo: Nicola Peltz Beckham/Instagram
From top: The U.K. premiere of Netflix’s Beckham in 2023. Photo: Gareth Cattermole/Getty ImagesBrooklyn with the Peltz family in December 2025. Brookl… more
From top: The U.K. premiere of Netflix’s Beckham in 2023. Photo: Gareth Cattermole/Getty ImagesBrooklyn with the Peltz family in December 2025. Brooklyn and Nicola shared images of their holidays in 2025, which they chose to spend with the Peltzes instead of the Beckhams. Photo: Nicola Peltz Beckham/Instagram
Nicola’s family surname may be more familiar to readers of, say, Barron’s than Us Weekly. Her father, Nelson Peltz, is a Wharton dropout from Brooklyn whose parents ran a frozen-food distribution business. He built his fortune in the 1980s as a corporate raider and, through his firm Trian Partners and other ventures, has commanded investments in a vast portfolio of Main Street suburban brands: Snapple, Heinz, Kraft, Family Dollar, Unilever, Wendy’s. Forbes estimates his net worth is approximately $1.5 billion, making him hover around No. 2,519 on its list of richest people in the world. (The Beckhams’ net worth is around $600 million.) Peltz has a pugnacious business reputation. He instigated his latest proxy battle in 2023 at Disney, complaining that the company had gone too woke. (“Why do I have to have a Marvel that’s all women?” he asked a Financial Times reporter during the fight. “Why do I need an all-Black cast?”) In 2025, the founders of Ben & Jerry’s, then part of Unilever, where Peltz sits on the board, complained that Peltz’s “political views” were one reason they were being censored on issues like their support for Palestine. He was a member of the group that failed to buy this magazine in 2003 and that also included Donny Deutsch, Harvey Weinstein, and Jeffrey Epstein — and in 2014, Epstein included Peltz’s name on a list of prominent business figures in an email to Bill Gates about men he might “like to know.” (Lawyers for Peltz insist that he had “no friendship, business dealings or other association with Epstein and no knowledge of his criminal conduct.”)
As a bachelor in the ’70s, according to the infamous business book The Predators’ Ball, Peltz had a “fast-track” social life: He was rumored to have hosted a topless tennis match in the Hamptons (lawyers for Nelson call this “recycled hearsay”). But since 1981, he has been married to Claudia Heffner, a model 13 years his junior. In 1986, the Peltzes bought High Winds, a 22-room hilltop stone mansion in Bedford, for $6 million; it had a waterfall, a rose garden, and a flock of albino peacocks. A year later, they bought Montsorrel. Over their first 20 years of marriage, Claudia and Nelson had eight children, six boys and two girls, including two sets of twins. (Nelson once referred to the double births as “leveraging productivity.”) Nelson was a ski bum in his youth and built a full-size ice rink at High Winds, adorned with the logos of companies Trian invested in, where his progeny were required to play hockey or skate. He sponsored a local kids’ team, the Snapple Express. “They were just normal obsessive hockey parents,” says Irene Levine, whose son was a goalie. “They had a Ralph Lauren couch off a room that looked onto the hockey rink, and both Nelson and Claudia were almost always there.”
Nicola, 31, is not the youngest Peltz child; her twin brothers, Zach and Greg, just turned 23. But she is the undisputed favorite, her model mother’s “mini-me” who inherited her delicate, elfin features and light eyes. She often posts an old photo of Claudia putting lipstick on her as a young girl standing in the aisle of a private jet. “The entire family revolves around Nicola. The brothers follow her everywhere,” someone who has spent time with the Peltzes told me. Nicola started acting as a child, and Claudia was her constant companion on sets and shoots — though the desire for stardom might actually have started with Nelson, who took Stella Adler classes when he was younger. In 1970, he made a cameo as “playboy” in Hi, Mom!, a Brian De Palma movie starring Robert De Niro, and he has a credited role as “partygoer” in Ocean’s Twelve. In 2010, Nicola starred in M. Night Shyamalan’s The Last Airbender adaptation, then played Mark Wahlberg’s daughter in the 2014 Transformers movie.
Her brother Will, nearly a decade her senior, eventually joined his sister in L.A. to become an actor. Both failed to launch, careerwise. Instead, the duo joined the young Hollywood party scene, intersecting with Brooklyn when he stayed at the Peltzes’ Coachella rental in 2017. Nicola was dating Anwar Hadid at the time, the 17-year-old model brother of Gigi and Bella. (Will Peltz, meanwhile, was dating his current fiancée, Kenya Kinski-Jones, Quincy Jones’s daughter.) Nicola and Anwar’s romance was relentlessly documented on Instagram and Snapchat with a nearly naked couples video shoot and pictures with the Hadid sisters and their mother, Yolanda. After they broke up in 2018, Nicola reportedly unfollowed all the Hadids. Alana Hadid, another sister, would later weigh in on Instagram about reports that Nicola and Brooklyn were seeking privacy during his public break with his parents. “That girl doesn’t want privacy,” she wrote. “She’s been trying to be famous for a decade.”
Clockwise from top left: The Beckhams’ Cotswolds estate; the Peltzes’ estate in Bedford; the yacht the Peltzes chartered in the Mediterranean in August 2025; the Beckhams’ yacht in the Mediterranean in August 2025. Photo: Andrew Lloyd/Alamy (Cotswolds); Cobra Team/Backgrid (Beckhams’ yacht); Sipa/Shutterstock (Bedford); Satt/Backgrid (yacht).
Clockwise from top left: The Beckhams’ Cotswolds estate; the Peltzes’ estate in Bedford; the yacht the Peltzes chartered in the Mediterranean in Augus… more
Clockwise from top left: The Beckhams’ Cotswolds estate; the Peltzes’ estate in Bedford; the yacht the Peltzes chartered in the Mediterranean in August 2025; the Beckhams’ yacht in the Mediterranean in August 2025. Photo: Andrew Lloyd/Alamy (Cotswolds); Cobra Team/Backgrid (Beckhams’ yacht); Sipa/Shutterstock (Bedford); Satt/Backgrid (yacht).
By the time Brooklyn and Nicola reconnected at a West Hollywood Halloween party in 2019, each had something the other wanted: Nicola still wasn’t famous, and Brooklyn still needed direction. Eight months after they got together, in June 2020, he planned a surprise proposal at a gazebo on the grounds of High Winds. The couple had spent the early months of the pandemic there and at Montsorrel. After Nicola accepted, they flew to celebrate with the Beckhams at their estate in the Cotswolds. In the Instagram photos, Nicola wore a flouncy yellow dress from the Victoria Beckham brand. The Sun reported that her mother-in-law would also be designing Nicola’s wedding gown. “I love you so much victoria i’m the luckiest girl,” she wrote on Instagram.
By most accounts, both families were initially enthusiastic. The Beckhams were delighted they didn’t need to worry about a money-grubber or a hanger-on. In a sign of goodwill toward their new in-laws, Victoria and David even installed a £7,000 Wendy’s Frosty machine in their country house, news of which was leaked to The Sun. Nelson seemed especially excited to have the famous Beckhams in the family; The Wall Street Journal reported he boasted to friends about the relationship. (Through lawyers, Nelson denied that he “boasted.”) Claudia also enjoyed their newfound clout. She reportedly walked up to Serena and Venus Williams at a charity event and invited them to the nuptials on the spot despite their not being close family friends, Nicola said in Tatler.
The couple leveled up almost immediately too. In 2021, Brooklyn and Nicola attended the Met Gala and landed a Pepe Jeans campaign. Brooklyn revealed dozens of tattoos dedicated to his fiancée, including her eyes on the back of his neck and her mother’s rosary beads on his hand. Like infatuated teenagers with infinite budgets, they made necklaces of their own gold-dipped wisdom teeth. Nicola eagerly participated in Beckham family events, like when both clans attended a soccer match in Miami, where the Beckhams had recently purchased a $20 million penthouse.
The relationship seemed to soften Nicola, who one person said has a “coldness.” (A friend says it’s more that she is “very in her own world. She’s generous and she shares a lot, but she’s very homey and can come across aloof.”) Nicola has been the subject of nasty industry gossip over the years, including that she was the unnamed “mean girl” heiress Bella Thorne referenced in a 2015 Seventeen magazine interview. Her newfound Beckham-associated fame also dredged up old rumors that she had once pushed her nanny down the stairs; a longtime Peltz butler as well as the nanny’s nephew told the Daily Mail in 2022 that this was a lie.
Brooklyn, in turn, benefited from Nicola’s machinations: It was her idea that he start filming himself cooking, a hobby he developed during pandemic lockdown. Thus began his next new career as a food influencer, and in December 2021 he debuted Cookin’ With Brooklyn, an eight-episode show that aired on Facebook Messenger’s new platform, Watch Together. Unfortunately, like his other projects, the show was ridiculed in the press; the New York Post reported that it required an outsize staff of 62 and a budget of $100,000 per episode. A viral TikTok video in which a man-on-the-street interviewer asks Brooklyn what he does to afford his $1.2 million McLaren sports car, to which Brooklyn replies, “I’m a chef,” did not help. Nor did the fact that Cookin’ With Brooklyn premiered right around the time the term nepo baby started going mainstream owing to a wave of quick-turn ventures by other celebrity children. Kendall Jenner had just launched her 818 tequila brand; Hailey Bieber was developing Rhode. Brooklyn’s cooking show was merely a drop in a vast pool of denim lines, podcasts, beverages, and other celebrity-offspring exploits backed by dubious levels of talent and expertise.
Still, a producer who worked on Cookin’ With Brooklyn told me that Brooklyn was professional and eager to learn, showed up on time, and was polite to the crew. Occasionally, Nicola would visit the set. Someone told the producer her dad “was the Frosty-machine guru or something.” This person remembers seeing a billboard across the street from the studio showing the couple’s Pepe Jeans ad, their black-and-white figures towering over the sidewalk. “It was funny,” the producer says, “because still no one really knew who they were. Besides the name Beckham, obviously.”
As Brooklyn was making steak-frites with James Corden on late-night TV, wedding planning descended into chaos. The Peltzes would be hosting at Montsorrel, and just six weeks before the April 2022 date, celebrity planner Preston Bailey stepped down. He was “overcommitted,” he later told “Page Six,” and “couldn’t deliver the quality I was used to.” In his place, they brought on Nicole Braghin and Arianna Grijalba, a Miami-based planning duo with a smaller profile. Initially, Nicola and her mother seemed happy with this decision. “U girls ARE LIFE SAVORS,” Nicola wrote in a group chat she named “The Real Planners,” which included Claudia, Nicola, Brooklyn, and Alex Schack, Nicola’s then-publicist, as well as Leslie Fremar, her longtime stylist, and Nancy Banks, her acting coach, both of whom Nicola described as her best friends. “Fire Preston’s assistants,” Nicola wrote. “Cut them off … I hate them.” Nelson too was pleased with the new team, having negotiated the planners’ core fee down to $215,000 from $250,000. “AI AI AI!” he wrote in an email to Braghin. “Done!! I love you both & I trust you both!! Here’s to the beginning of a long & happy relationship!!”
Grijalba and Braghin inherited what they described as a crime scene. The previous planners had created a wedding website that allowed guests to RSVP for as many people as they wanted. Invites had gone out to some and not others from guest lists that were incomplete and out of date. There were still vendors to be booked. Claudia and Nicola, according to the planners, “insisted that Victoria Beckham could not know about any internal mistakes regarding the ongoing planning of her son’s wedding, including any errors with the guest list.” As Braghin and Grijalba attempted to impose order, the group chat pinged constantly with new requests for flowers suspended in ice; for a “water dance floor”; for a peach, apricot, and baby-pink color palette at the after-party. Brooklyn piped up to ask about the Wendy’s burger truck that would be available for late night (should there be a “Nicola” version of the burger with lettuce instead of a bun?) and if they should consider acquiring a “gun that shoots a net because theres probably gonna be drones.” “Did Megan get an invite … And Harry,” Claudia asked. “deSantis must be OFF THE GUEST LIST. PLEASE CONFIRM!” Nicola wrote. “Also david blaine is going to go around to tables on Friday night it’s for free he’s my friend.”
Within a few days of working with the new planners, Nicola grew increasingly agitated about the guest list. Busy filming the Hulu show Welcome to Chippendales, she refused to look at a Google doc or download Slack or any other app they wanted her to use. “I have said from day one I do not do google doc,” she wrote in the Real Planners group. Eager to placate her, they assigned a full-time staffer to update her live as RSVPs came in from a new website. Almost immediately, however, F1 driver Lewis Hamilton entered the wrong information, indicating “yes” when he actually couldn’t attend. Nicola became incensed. “He can’t come so explain why you said he RSVPd yes,” she texted. “I’m tired of catching mistakes on this RSVP list honestly.” According to the planners, they were fired the very next day via a phone call from Nelson, who, in their telling, blamed the decision on his wife and daughter. The family then hired celebrity planner Michelle Rago, who had a month to finish the job.
When the wedding actually happened on April 9, to the outside world everything seemed to go off without a hitch (except for the incident with the rabbi). The water aisle was procured. Ron DeSantis did not attend. Cherry blossoms adorned the custom cocktails. By the end of the night, according to one guest, “it all seemed like happy families.” Victoria took her shoes off and danced with Nicola to the Spice Girls. The next morning, at a brunch on the other side of the Peltz estate, David presented the couple with a $500,000 vintage Jaguar. The license plate read LUNAZ, the name of the company that had restored the car, in which David had recently purchased a 10 percent stake. Brooklyn and Nicola christened themselves the Peltz Beckhams and changed their Instagram handles accordingly.
Eight months later, Nelson sued Braghin and Grijalba for his $159,000 deposit. The complaint contained the aforementioned text messages from the Real Planners chat including a joke Braghin had made about drinking tequila at the end of a long day, implying she was irresponsible on the job. The planners responded, releasing the entire chain of 1,400 messages, as well as email exchanges with Nelson, and called him a “billionaire bully.” Ultimately, they settled, and Braghin and Grijalba agreed to make a donation to relief efforts in Ukraine in Nicola and Brooklyn’s names.
Many people were shocked Nelson would sue over what was basically chump change for him, all the while exposing troves of unflattering documents. A salacious doc based on the lawsuit, Peltz Beckhams vs the Wedding Planners, was set to air on HBO Max in 2023. But before it could, according to Puck, Nelson simply called David Zaslav and had him pull it (lawyers for Nelson deny this). Litigation seems to be standard recourse for Nelson anyway. He was locked in a yearslong court battle with the Town of Bedford for permission to land his Sikorsky helicopter on his home helipad, giving up only when he lost in state court on appeal. He and Claudia are currently racking up $250 in fines a day, more than $40,000 so far, over an unauthorized padel court they built at Montsorrel. Maybe they’ll just pay it forever. When asked about how the wedding planners had characterized him in a 2024 interview, he said, “What sense is being a billionaire if you’re not a bully?”
Almost immediately after the wedding, stories began trickling out about tension between the Peltz Beckhams and the Beckhams. Deuxmoi spread an alleged account of an incident in which Beckham family friend Marc Anthony dedicated a wedding song to Victoria rather than Nicola. Then, as the couple sailed around the south of France with the Peltz siblings and parents for their honeymoon, there were rumblings about why Nicola ultimately wore a Valentino gown rather than one of Victoria’s designs. The couple managed to quickly put these stories to bed. “I was going to and I really wanted to, and then a few months down the line, she realized that her atelier couldn’t do it, so then I had to pick another dress,” Nicola said in Variety. (A person in the fashion industry said this explanation makes sense, especially given that Victoria was showing at Paris Fashion Week for the first time that year.) Vogue reported that Nicola had worked with Valentino’s couture bridal team in Rome for a year before the wedding. Brooklyn said that “everyone gets along.”
Mostly, over the next three years, there was mutual branding support as each group showed up to help increase the profile of their various endeavors. Nicola appeared at important Brand Beckham events including the premiere of Beckham, David’s Netflix documentary, produced through his own company, Studio 99. She was there too at Victoria’s fashion show in Paris. In turn, the Beckhams all gathered at a London Whole Foods to support Brooklyn’s next food-fluencing venture: Cloud 23, a high-end hot sauce in a “sexy” bottle named for one of David’s football-jersey numbers. Nelson gave him more than business advice; he ultimately invested in the project along with Brooklyn’s father.
Nelson also funded Lola, a film Nicola wrote, directed, and starred in as a poor exotic dancer who tries to free her nonbinary sibling from an alcoholic mother in Middle America. Brooklyn had a cameo, but it was apparently cut by his wife because he couldn’t stop looking directly into the camera. The film bears a resemblance to The Florida Project, which makes sense given that Nicola originally co-directed with Bria Vinaite, the breakout star of that film. But Vinaite’s name has since been removed from the production credits, and she didn’t attend the February 2024 premiere in L.A. Victoria did, however, posing gamely on the red carpet. Later she danced to “Wannabe” at the after-party with Nicola, who this time wore a custom Victoria Beckham suit. (Also present: Elon Musk, who had recently become friendly with Nelson and his son Diesel, 31, a tech entrepreneur. Nelson, who fundraised for Donald Trump, claims to have connected Musk to Trump at a breakfast meeting at Montsorrel not long after the Lola premiere. Out of that breakfast, supposedly, grew the idea for DOGE.)
The fragile peace seemed to last until May 2025, when Brooklyn and Nicola missed a week of 50th-birthday celebrations for David, including a father-son fishing trip, a party in the Cotswolds, a day trip to his favorite French winery, and a party at the London restaurant Core. Brooklyn was glaringly absent from immaculately posed photos on the Beckhams’ townhouse steps and in their country garden, despite posting pictures of himself and his wife in London the same week.
The internet seized on the fallout. The tabloid press, TikTok pundits, and Redditors dissected the unfolding drama in real time. TMZ was the apparent Peltz Beckham venue. It was the first to report that Nicola and Brooklyn were uncomfortable around Romeo Beckham’s new girlfriend, Kim Turnbull, who had supposedly once dated Brooklyn (she denied she and Brooklyn had ever been romantic), and that they had allegedly tried to see David in London in private rather than at the birthday events but were rejected. Other reported offenses leaked, including that Victoria wouldn’t post about Nicola’s dog charity during the Los Angeles fires.
The Daily Mail, however, seemed to be openly Team Beckham. Nearly a story a day was published by a reporter named Katie Hind with headlines like “Nicola Peltz and Her ‘Desperate Thirst for Fame.’” Elsewhere, Hind reported Brooklyn was a hostage. Things ramped up in July, when Cruz Beckham seemed to confirm the conflict in a series of nasty messages on his Instagram: “Oh, it’s Stockholm syndrome,” he wrote. Then: “Bloody inbreds” and “Whole family o’ cunts.” The Daily Mail published a story about it, which was quickly taken down — highly unusual for such a high-traffic article. Breaker Media later reported that the editor-in-chief indeed had it removed to protect a “relationship” between the Beckhams and Hind. She didn’t hide an alleged relationship very well, if she were trying to. Her Instagram profile picture is a selfie with David. (A source close to the family denied the Daily Mail was “Team Beckham.” When reached by Breaker for comment about the article getting killed, Hind said, “I have no idea what you are talking about, I’ve been on holiday since last week.”)
The British tabloids deemed the family breakup “Beckxit.” By the end of the summer, Brooklyn and Nicola had sent a legal letter saying the Beckham parents could contact them only through their lawyers and hired Matthew Hiltzik, Harvey Weinstein’s former spokesman at Miramax. The two clans narrowly avoided each other in St.-Tropez, where the Beckhams were vacationing on their $16 million yacht while the Peltzes and Peltz Beckhams were on an $85 million yacht not far away. In August, Nicola and Brooklyn staged a vow-renewal ceremony at High Winds officiated by Nelson. The attendees included Alexander Wang and Adrien Brody. Not a single Beckham was invited.
Brooklyn and Nicola’s 2025 vow renewal was Peltz-centric: Her father officiated, and not a single Beckham attended.
Photo: Nicola Peltz Beckham/Instagram
His parents’ defenders couldn’t believe Brooklyn’s actions. How could Brooklyn disavow the very people who made him who he is? How could he ignore them on Christmas? No one would follow him, no one would care about him, no one would buy his sexy hot sauce, trolls wrote, if it wasn’t for Posh-’n’-Becks.
In January, Brooklyn answered them: He never had a choice. “For my entire life, my parents have controlled narratives in the press about our family,” he proclaimed in an explosive series of black-background Notes-app pages posted on the Beckham medium of choice: Instagram. “The performative social media posts, family events and inauthentic relationships have been a fixture of the life I was born into. My family values public promotion and endorsements above all else. Brand Beckham comes first.” He did not want to reconcile, he wrote. “Family ‘love’ is decided by how much you post on social media, or how quickly you drop everything to show up and pose for a family photo op even if it’s at the expense of our professional obligations.” Brooklyn was reportedly pushed over the edge by another report from Hind, which ran two days before he posted his manifesto, insisting that he “wants to reconcile” but Nicola was holding him back. He believed he could trace the story directly to his own family’s PR.
Among a litany of grievances that had already appeared in TMZ and elsewhere (the dress, the dog charity), Brooklyn’s statement listed a few new ones, including that his parents had attempted to “bribe” him into signing away the rights to his name on the eve of his wedding. “My holdout affected the payday, and they have never treated me the same since,” he claimed, referring to David’s Authentic Brands Group deal. (A source with knowledge of the situation says this was a standard “co-existence agreement,” freeing him, instead, to sell his own Beckham products without fear of a lawsuit. “The deal was already done; it didn’t influence the payday,” the source says.)
But the core of the issue was somehow the very same thing that had leaked in the first week after the wedding at Montsorrel: the song dedicated by Marc Anthony. Victoria had “hijacked” the couple’s “first dance” when Anthony called her to the stage rather than Nicola during his song “You Sang to Me.” Technically, the couple had already danced to Elvis’s “Can’t Help Falling in Love,” and Nicola had already danced with her father to “Wind Beneath My Wings” — but another accusation Brooklyn made about Victoria was much more serious anyway. “She danced very inappropriately on me in front of everyone. I’ve never felt more uncomfortable or humiliated in my entire life,” Brooklyn wrote. Now the conflict was truly Oedipal; memes flooded social media of Brooklyn’s mother “slutdropping” against him on the dance floor.
The Beckham camp is adamant that the last part is utterly untrue. “It absolutely wasn’t like that,” the source close to the family said. “David and the rest of the siblings joined quickly after. It was a fun, light moment.” Gordon Ramsay took to The Sun to say he saw nothing “salacious” or “inappropriate” at the wedding. On the other hand, DJ Fat Tony, who played at the after-party, came out on British daytime TV to back up Brooklyn. Though he insists he witnessed the dance, a person at the wedding told me he wasn’t in the room for the alleged faux pas. Other guests I spoke to said if there had been an uncomfortable dance, they didn’t hear about it or see it. Peltz Beckham sources say they have a video but will never show it.
Nicola did run out of the room crying — there is no doubt on either side that she was offended by something during Anthony’s appearance. “It was obvious that Nicola couldn’t bear Victoria being onstage rather than her,” says the same source close to the family. And even if she had felt slighted, is it something to hold on to for years? Sources close to the Beckhams claim they consistently offer to meet Brooklyn and Nicola in any way they desire — with lawyers, the Peltz parents, siblings, a therapist, a mediator — and are desperate to repair the relationship.
Peltz Beckham supporters say Victoria and David have always had an unhealthy obsession with fame, and the dance was indicative of their inability to let anyone else be the center of attention, even for one night. To them, Brooklyn is finally speaking up about years of pressure and performativity. “Those kids were trained to pose in photos before anything else,” the person who worked for the family says. Now Brooklyn has used Brand Beckham’s own playbook — managed engagement — to free himself. When reached by New York, a spokesperson for the couple said, “Despite repeated attempts to find common ground and satisfy family expectations, the cycle of false narratives has persisted. They know their truth, and if others prefer to prioritize tabloid reports over reality, they are at peace with that and are simply done answering to it.” Representatives for David and Victoria Beckham declined to comment.
Each party in the debacle insists it wants only peace and accuses the other of leaking to the press. Each insists the other is used to being in control of the narrative and can’t stand anyone else sharing the spotlight. As in most disputes among families, even ones of a considerably lower net worth, both teams, rather unsatisfyingly, are probably right. It’s obvious the Beckham parents employ their kids in their relentless image management. But that image has also clearly been an invaluable source of clout for Brand Peltz Beckham. Nicola is more famous for Beckxit than she has ever been for one of her acting roles.
What’s undeniable is that in the battle of oligarchy versus fame, Brooklyn is betting on oligarchy. Hustling for likes and sponsorships isn’t what it used to be. His own parents know very well that maintaining celebrity today is an exhausting, ceaseless game, even at the top. Why else would people as beloved and famous as they are still have to film Uber Eats ads referring to their glory days? Shill fruit snacks in Target? What a relief it must be for Brooklyn to land somewhere none of it really matters. The Peltzes are so rich that they can just pay for it all — reviews, financial success, or public adoration doesn’t make or break what Nelson’s heirs decide to do with their lives. Nicola has two more movies financed by her own company, Bunny Films, in the pipeline, in which she plays a ballerina and a beauty influencer. Brooklyn has registered a restaurant, Beck’s Buns, which, according to the trademark application, could also offer merch, online entertainment, and NFTs.
If that even happens. For the moment, Brooklyn seems content to live as a nearly full-time wife guy. Nicola bought them a new $16 million house in Beverly Hills in 2024. They have been vacationing in Montecito and drinking $2,000 bottles of wine. The hostage situation, if it is one, doesn’t seem so bad. Though Brooklyn has some paid appearances in his schedule, like cooking for an Airbnb experience and attending a restaurant opening in Las Vegas, I’ve heard he mostly drives Nicola around. When she travels for filming, he goes with her. Someone who recently worked an event with him said he was sweet but left as soon as he could: “Dude is in love. He was like, ‘I have to go hang out with my wife.’”
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If you prefer to read in print, you can also find this article in the April 6, 2026, issue of
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If you prefer to read in print, you can also find this article in the April 6, 2026, issue of
New York Magazine.