Nicholas Hoult’s wife hits back after being body-shamed over breasts at Oscars

Home> Entertainment> Celebrity

Nicholas Hoult’s wife hits back after being body-shamed over breasts at Oscars

If you've nothing nice to say it's best not to pollute the internet with your noise

google discoverFollow us on Google Discover

Bryana Holly is having no bulls**t from the people who attempted to body-shame her for her appearance at the Oscars where she attended with her husband Nicholas Hoult.

Following the awards ceremony, husband and wife decamped to the Vanity Fair afterparty on 15 March, with Holly sharing pictures of their visit as they wore stylish outfits of black.

Sadly, it seems as though putting some pictures on the internet has resulted in her getting abuse as she later posted a statement to Instagram hitting back at the trolls.

She wrote: "I am seeing the comments around my chest and not that * anyone * is owed an explanation but this is the product of a breastfeeding mother who hasn't fed her babies in hours ok! If you know then you know."

That's about all the explanation needed for the people who have no business leaving unpleasant comments on someone's appearance.

Who is Bryana Holly?

Bryana shared this image of her and her husband on Instagram, but trolls came for her (Amy Sussman/Getty Images for Vanity Fair)
Bryana shared this image of her and her husband on Instagram, but trolls came for her (Amy Sussman/Getty Images for Vanity Fair)

Holly is a model, primarily from swimsuits and lingerie, and has 1.2 million Instagram followers. She's appeared in Playboy and is currently represented by Wilhelmina Models.

Before Hoult, she'd previously dated Brody Jenner (Kim K's half-brother) in 2013 and 5 Seconds of Summer star Ashton Irwin from 2015 to 2016.

She and Hoult first got together in 2016, and a couple of years later they welcomed their first child, their second was born in 2022.

Bryana shared a picture with her family on Father's Day last year (Instagram/@bryanaholly)
Bryana shared a picture with her family on Father's Day last year (Instagram/@bryanaholly)

In November 2024 at the Governors Awards, Hoult referred to Holly as his 'wife' and later clarified for those who thought it was still unclear that they had indeed got tied the knot.

The couple have largely kept their private life private as they will sporadically post pictures of themselves together online, but are mostly able to keep the rest of it under wraps and between themselves.

Holly and Hoult pictured in 2013 (Allen Berezovsky/Getty Images)
Holly and Hoult pictured in 2013 (Allen Berezovsky/Getty Images)

Elsewhere at the Oscars it was a winning night for the movies Sinners and One Battle After Another, Travis Scott mocked Timothy Chalamet for heading home empty-handed and there was the usual complaints about the 'In Memoriam' section.

Bryana Holly is far from the first woman to have to deal with body-shaming while sharing what ought to be happy memories, and she is almost certainly not going to be the last.

Others who have been subjected to similar include Ariana Grande, who last year reminded people making comments about her body that they were doing something 'dangerous'.

The folks who feel the need to body-shame others are free to keep it to themselves next time (Chad Salvador/WWD via Getty Images)
The folks who feel the need to body-shame others are free to keep it to themselves next time (Chad Salvador/WWD via Getty Images)

She said: "I've been doing this in front of the public, and been a specimen in a petri-dish since I was 16 or 17.

"So, I have heard it all. I’ve heard every version of it, of what's wrong with me. And then you fix it, and then it's wrong for different reasons.

"It's hard to protect yourself from that noise, and it's uncomfortable no matter what scale you're experiencing it on. Even if you're going to Thanksgiving dinner and someone's granny says, 'Oh my God, you look skinny, what happened?' Or 'You look heavy, what happened?'

"In today's society, there is a comfortability that we shouldn't have at all - commenting on others' looks, appearance, what they think is going on behind the scenes, or health or how they present themselves, from what you're wearing to your body, to your face, to your everything. There's a comfortability that I think is really dangerous."

Featured Image Credit: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images

Topics: Oscars, Celebrity, Social Media