Tiger Lily Hutchence welcomes first child
In February, the singer-songwriter and her now-husband, Ben Archer, announced they were expecting a baby.
The pair didn't share the infant's sex or due date.
However, editors at MailOnline published photos depicting Tiger Lily, 28, pushing a newborn in a pram in London on Tuesday.
One snap showed a pale blue baby blanket draped over the pram.
Representatives for Tiger Lily and Ben have not yet commented on the happy news.
The couple married in April after dating for three years.
Tiger Lily is the daughter of British TV presenter Paula Yates, who died of an accidental drug overdose at the age of 41 in 2000, and INXS singer Michael Hutchence, who died by suicide at the age of 37 in 1997.
As both of her parents died when she was a young girl, the artist was legally adopted by her mother's former husband, Irish singer-activist, Bob Geldof.
Bob raised Tiger Lily alongside her half-sisters: Fifi, 42, Pixie, 34, and the late Peaches, who died at the age of 25 in 2014.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Lifelong Wolves fans from Dudley care home visit Molineux
TWO lifelong football fans have enjoyed a heart warming return to their beloved team's stadium after decades away. Fred Tennant and Ian Humphries, residents at Broadway Halls care home in Dudley, were given the chance to visit Wolverhampton Wanderers' Molineux Stadium thanks to a wish fulfilled by the Wolves Make a Wish Trust. Scott Bates, activities coordinator at Broadway Halls, described it as 'a perfect day'. The pair, who have lived at the care home for two years, began their visit at the Wolves Museum. Mr Tennant pointed out photos of matches he attended years ago, while Mr Humphries quietly took in the memories. The day became even more special when they met Wolves legends John Richards and Steve Bull. The former players chatted with the fans over tea and sandwiches before leading them out onto the pitch. Mr Tennant and Mr Humphries had their shirts signed and received a Wolves memorabilia gift bag. Mr Humphries said: "This is something I'll remember forever." Mr Tennant agreed. He said: "It's been the most memorable day. "A day I'll never forget. "It is such an amazing feeling to know that such a loving group of people care so much about us that they helped us to live out a dream – and we didn't even have to ask." Danica Chugh, general manager at Broadway Halls, said: "We believe that every moment is worth cherishing. "We want everyone we care for to know how important they are to us here at Broadway Halls. "It is testament to the hard work and dedication of the team here in making our residents' dreams come true. "It was wonderful to see how happy Ian and Fred were – and the staff loved being a part of this as well."


New York Times
4 minutes ago
- New York Times
5 Eerie Sisters Who Morph Into Dogs? This Town Has Even More to Fear.
THE HOUNDING, by Xenobe Purvis Welcome to Little Nettlebed, England, where the 'season of strangeness' has begun. Heat is addling every resident's mind, priming them to feel indiscriminate rage — toward even 'the sound of the birds, the air on their skin.' A sturgeon, huge and unholy, is found beached along the shrinking river. And there are the Mansfield girls — five orphaned, aloof sisters in mourning, whose self-possession and inscrutable mien make their neighbors uneasy. The local drunk, a misogynistic ferryman named Pete Darling, swears he's seen them transform into a pack of dogs, and before long, news of his dubious vision has bolted around town. Xenobe Purvis's outstanding debut novel, 'The Hounding,' unfolds in 1700s Oxfordshire, but the atmosphere of paranoia and bloodthirsty groupthink often feels uncomfortably familiar. The Mansfields — Anne, Elizabeth, Hester, Grace and Mary, so close that their names spoken aloud sound like an incantation, or a prayer — live just beyond town with their grandfather Joseph, a recent widower. Half-blind and benevolent, like a sweetly fictionalized John Milton, Joseph presides over what once was a happy, liberated farm. His wife had a fiercely independent streak: a point of pride for Joseph, and a trait they nurtured in their granddaughters. Now his greatest wish is to protect the girls from malign incursions, and he's right to worry — beyond his home is 'a ravenous world, a world with teeth.' True to its name, there's an ominous air throughout Little Nettlebed. 'If violence was their god, then the alehouse was their church,' Purvis writes of the villagers. No one models this better than Pete Darling, who is prone to visitations from angels and vaguely biblical dreams while recovering from a bender. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Katie Price apologised to daughter Princess over her heartbreak
Moving scenes on ITV's The Princess Diaries set to air on August 10 Princess Andre has revealed her mum, Katie Price, said sorry to her over the messy fallout from the Kieran Hayler divorce. The 18-year-old famous offspring invited the cameras into her life with the fly-on-the-wall documentary, The Princess Diaries, where she has the opportunity to share a more vulnerable side. Wearing her heart on her sleeve in the first episode, which is due to air on August 10, she spoke about the moment her mum apologised to her. Price was married to Hayler from 2013, and they separated in 2018 when it emerged he had cheated on the former glamour model. In the years they were together, they raised their two children — Jett and Bunny — as well as Price's older children — Princess, Junior and Harvey. Looking back on those five years, Princess said they had grown "close" to Hayler. "We loved him," she told the cameras. Price and Hayler's break-up played out very publicly in the newspaper headlines. The Princess Diaries reminded viewers of one of those hard-hitting headlines: Katie Price hit breaking point and attempted suicide after Kieran Hayler split. Speaking from the heart, Princess said her mother went through a "dark time". "I wouldn't say I'm fully recovered from it," she said. However, the influencer said her mum has "fixed" herself after the breakdown of her third marriage and apologised to her for the impact it had on her. Now Princess is older, she has become best friends with her mum and they do a lot together. "Mum is such a different person," she explained. "She's genuinely really fixed herself. She spoke to me about this. I realised that I should never, she apologised, I never wanted an apology from her. It was a lot that she acknowledged it: 'you are my kids and I love you and I need to prioritise you'. We are so close now. We do a lot together. I love her. She's my best friend." The Princess Diaries' main star explained Price hadn't dealt with the break up well because she was "heartbroken". "She went through a dark time," she said. "It was hard me for adult-y thing you shouldn't have to go through [as a child]. Everything that happened the press picked up on, they would write stories constantly. I would go into school asking me questions about it cos they'd seen it in the papers. I would get into bed and cry." Princess kept how she was truly feeling from her dad Peter Andre because of her parents' ongoing feud. She said: "I would never go speak to my dad about it. I'd grown up knowing my mum and dad don't like each other." Due to this feud, Price has been banned from filming The Princess Diaries. Princess had to move out of her house (albeit temporarily) so she could live full-time at her dad Andre's home for filming. Although Price was banned from the show, Princess found a way to get her involved by asking her mum to film a voice note for her. The Princess Diaries airs on ITV2 and ITVX on Sunday.