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Skip to main content Open Navigation Menu Menu Story Saved To revist this article, visit My Profile, then View saved stories. Close Alert Story Saved To revist this article, visit My Profile, then View saved stories. Close Alert Sign In Subscribe Subscribe Subscribe JOIN TODAY 1 year for $29.99 $8 + a free tote. Subscribe Search Search * Politics * Business * Hollywood * Style * Culture * Royals * Celebrity * Video * Podcasts * Archive * VF Shop * What Is Cinema? * Newsletters * Archive * VF Shop * VF London * Magazine Limited Time Offer - Get 1 year for $29.99 $8 + a free tote. Limited Time Offer — Subscribe Subscribe Subscribe This one's on us. This one’s on us. You are reading your first free article. Limited Time Offer - 1 year for $29.99 $8, plus a free tote. You are reading your first free article. Limited Time Offer - 1 year for $8, plus a free tote. Join Now Join Now Subscribe Already a subscriber? Sign in. Lawsuits LIZZO’S DETHRONING HAS BEEN SWIFT Beyoncé appeared to remove Lizzo’s name from a song while she was singing. By Kenzie Bryant August 2, 2023 Steve Jennings/Getty Images. Save this storySave Save this storySave Update (Thursday, August 3 at 9:00 a.m.): Lizzo has responded at length to three of her former dancers’ lawsuit filed in the Los Angeles County Superior Court. In a post on Instagram, the performer wrote, “These last few days have been gut-wrenchingly difficult and overwhelmingly disappointing. My work ethic, morals, and respectfulness have been questioned. My character has been criticized. Usually I chose not to respond to false allegations but these are as unbelievable as they sound and too outrageous to not be addressed.”\ “The sensationalized stories are coming from former employees who have already publicly admitted they were told their behavior on tour was inappropriate and unprofessional,” the Grammy-winner continued. The suit claims Arianna Davis had been fired for filming a meeting in which Lizzo provided notes to the dancers, which Davis says she wanted to review later. Lizzo added that she doesn’t want to be “looked at as a victim, but also know that I am not the villain that people and the media have portrayed me to be these last few days. I am very open with my sexuality and expressing myself but I can not accept or allow people to use that openness to make me out to be something I am not.” Read her full response below:\ Advertisement INSTAGRAM CONTENT This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from. \ The original article continues below. The internet is many things, but most of all it’s swift. On Tuesday, an employment lawyer representing Lizzo’s former backup dancers, Davis, Crystal Williams, and Noelle Rodriguez, sent around a lawsuit filed against their former employer. These dancers are alleging several things against the performer including failure to prevent sexual or religious harassment, disability discrimination, and assault. (Lizzo did not immediately respond to a request for comment.) Hours after the initial headlines posted, Courtney Hollinquest, another former dancer, who clarified she is not part of the lawsuit, voiced her support for those that sued. Soon thereafter, Quinn Wilson, Lizzo’s former creative director, echoed Hollinquest’s sentiments, adding that “I haven’t been apart [sic] of that world for around three years for a reason.” 1 year for just $29.99 $8 + a free tote. 1 year for just $29.99 $8 + a free tote. Subscribe Now Around dinnertime, Sophia Nahli Allison, an Oscar-nominated filmmaker, who had been hired to make a documentary on Lizzo admitted that she walked away from the project after two weeks. She said she “witnessed how arrogant, self-centered, and unkind [Lizzo] is.” By Tuesday night, while in Boston, Beyoncé left the name “Lizzo” out of her “Break My Soul” remix. The song used to go “Betty Davis, Solange Knowles / Badu, Lizzo, Kelly Rowl.” In videos from the crowd, it sounds like she just repeats “Badu.” Davis and Williams joined Lizzo’s team after competing as contestants on Lizzo’s Amazon Prime reality show Lizzo’s Watch Out for the Big Grrrls in March 2021. Lizzo hired Rodriguez for her “Rumors” video and kept her on afterward. Davis and Williams were fired in the spring of 2023, after which, Rodriguez resigned. Besides listing Lizzo as a defendant, the suit adds her production company Big Grrrl Big Touring, Inc. (BGBT), and Shirlene Quigley, captain of her dance team. The suit claims that Quigley, the dance captain, is a devout, proselytizing Christian, and became obsessed with Davis’s virginity and “singled out“ Rodriguez as a “non-believer.” Quigley, they allege, did not believe in premarital sex, but would speak continually about masturbation and simulated fellatio on a banana. Complaints about her, the lawsuit claims, would go unheeded. WATCH Robert Downey Jr. Breaks Down His Career, from 'Iron Man' to 'Oppenheimer' Most Popular * Ron DeSantis’s Largest Donor Closes His Wallet, Citing Abortion “Extremism” By Jack McCordick * Vanity Fair’s “It’s Raining Teens” Cover at 20: Where Are They Now? By Savannah Walsh * The Cast of Oppenheimer and the Real People They Play By Hillary Busis * They are also accusing the production company of offering them an unfair rate of 25% of full pay while they were on retainer and barred from seeking other dance work (other performers were allegedly paid a 50% rate for such a setup). In the spring, management agreed to a 50% retainer but by then its relationship with the dancers was “very strained,“ according to the suit. (Quigley and BGBT did not immediately respond to a request for comment.) The dancers, the lawsuit alleges, were “exposed to an overtly sexual atmosphere that permeated their workplace,” where outings with nudity and sexuality “were a focal point.” In Amsterdam, for example, during a night the dancers felt was obligatory to keep their job, they attended the club Bananenbar. “While at Bananenbar, things quickly got out of hand,” the lawsuit reads. “Lizzo began inviting cast members to take turns touching the nude performers, catching dildos launched from the performers’ vaginas, and eating bananas protruding from the performers’ vaginas. Lizzo then turned her attention to Ms. Davis and began pressuring Ms. Davis to touch the breasts of one of the nude women performing at the club. Lizzo began leading a chant goading Ms. Davis. Ms. Davis said three times, loud enough for all to hear, ‘I’m good,’ expressing her desire not to touch the performer.” Davis finally did so. “Plaintiffs were aghast with how little regard Lizzo showed for the bodily autonomy of her employees and those around her, especially in the presence of many people whom she employed,” the suit reads. Most ironically perhaps, Davis’s lawyer claims that Lizzo’s public posture of weight inclusivity did not extend to the dancers. She felt she had to “explain her weight gain and disclose intimate personal details about her life in order to keep her job,” the suit claims. Though this allegation would be shocking against anyone, it’s especially so against Lizzo, who has made herself the face of body positivity and inclusivity in the music world through self-love anthems like “Good as Hell” and “Juice.” She has a size-inclusive line of shapewear and has spoken at length about her own relationship to her body. MORE GREAT STORIES FROM VANITY FAIR * “It’s Raining Teens” at 20: Where Are They Now? * The Best TV Shows of 2023, So Far * Sex Toys, Financial Crimes, and the Origin of Barbie * That Sound You Hear Is Donald Trump Screaming, Crying, and Throwing Up in a Mar-a-Lago Bathroom * Ivanka Trump Is Not Letting Her Dad’s Mounting Legal Woes Ruin Her Summer * Inside the Actors Strike Press Apocalypse: “The Celebrity Factory Has Shut Down” * Is All This Amateur Therapy-Speak Just Making Us Lonelier? * From the Archive: Too Hepburn for Hollywood (2006) KENZIE BRYANT STAFF WRITER Kenzie Bryant is a staff writer at Vanity Fair, where she covers people and the way they live. See More By Kenzie Bryant » ROYAL WATCH Get the latest chatter, from Kensington Palace and beyond, straight to your inbox. Enter your e-mail address Sign Up By signing up you agree to our User Agreement and Privacy Policy & Cookie Statement. Read More Business How Screwed Are Donald Trump and His Adult Children, and Other Questions You Might Have About the “Staggering” Fraud Lawsuit Against Them How exactly did the alleged illegal activity go down? Was Tiffany involved? Is there any chance this could lead to prison time? And more! By Bess Levin Hollywood Ezra Miller’s “Messiah” Delusions: Inside The Flash Star’s Dark Spiral They’re one of Hollywood’s brightest stars—and most troubled actors. Amid safety concerns, and anxiety over the fate of a $200 million movie, VF unearths disturbing new details in a saga of grandiose sermons, guns, drugs, and alleged assaults and grooming. By Julie Miller Style The Idaho Murders, Part 1: How 4 College Kids Lived and Loved The brutal murders of four Idaho college students shocked millions. Through social media posts, court records, and other primary sources, author Kathleen Hale forensically reconstructs their lives before the crime, and the night they were killed. By Kathleen Hale News Monica Lewinsky: 25 “Randoms” on the 25th Anniversary of the Bill Clinton Calamity My name became public 25 years ago this week. What have I observed and learned in the quarter century since? Oh, plenty. By Monica Lewinsky by Taboolaby Taboola Sponsored LinksSponsored Links Promoted LinksPromoted Links PV Angebote Eilmeldung aus Brandenburg: Staat ändert Solar-VorgabenPV Angebote Undo Pro Verbraucher Vor 1987 geboren? Sie haben Anspruch auf diesen Krankenhaus-TrickPro Verbraucher Undo Hundeapotheke Bayern Dosen-Hundefutter: die dunkle WahrheitHundeapotheke BayernMehr erfahren Undo Tieberg™️ Was diese neuen Socken bei älteren Menschen bewirken, ist unglaublich!Tieberg™️ Undo Checkfox Habeck will Solarausbau beschleunigen: Was das für Hausbesitzer bedeutetCheckfox Undo goldentree.de Schlaffe Haut? Arzt empfiehlt: Tun Sie das 1x am Tag!goldentree.de Undo Get 1 year for $29.99 $8. Plus, a free tote. 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