Eddie Murphy And Mel B’s Daughter Comes Out As Transgender
Angel Brown, the only child of Eddie Murphy and Mel B, just turned 18.

Coming out is rarely a headline moment for the person doing it. It’s usually a quiet, personal decision, shared on their terms – sometimes through a conversation, a text, or even just a subtle change on social media. And when you’re the child of two celebrities, there’s an added layer of public curiosity that can make that process harder to control.
Angel’s story isn’t unique among children of celebrities, either. Just recently, Robert De Niro’s daughter Airyn came out publicly as transgender at 29. In an interview with Them magazine, she shared how being trans “felt right,” adding: “I feel like I’m meant to be doing this.”
Airyn also addressed the way she was portrayed in the media after being photographed out to lunch with her father, where she was misgendered and labeled a “nepo baby.” She pushed back, saying:
“Not only did they get information wrong about me… They just sort of reminded me that people really don’t know anything about me.”
Her father didn’t need a press tour to show where he stood. His response was simple and clear:
“I love and support Airyn as my daughter. I don’t know what the big deal is. I love all my children.”
The public might focus on the fame, the headlines, or the unexpected connections between old sitcoms and pop bands, but the heart of both stories is the same – young people figuring out who they are and parents who are doing what they should be doing: standing by them.
In a world where public opinion often moves faster than empathy, quiet support can be louder than applause. Angel’s transition didn’t come with a press conference or a staged photo shoot. It came with a pronoun change and the kind of support that doesn’t need to be broadcast to be real.