Report details Brooklyn Beckham and Nicola Peltz dinner where Harry and Meghan were present
Brooklyn Beckham and Nicola Peltz’s much-discussed dinner with Prince Harry and Meghan Markle has resurfaced amid fresh focus on Beckham’s strained relationship with his family. The gathering, said to have taken place in May last year in Montecito, has been cited in ongoing comparisons between Beckham’s public family dispute and the Duke of Sussex’s long-running rift with the Royal Family.
The account was revisited after Beckham posted a lengthy statement alleging his parents had “controlled narratives” about their family and describing what he called “performative social media posts”. In the same piece, Mirror reported that the dinner where the Sussexes were present was not a private invitation from Harry and Meghan, but part of a wider gathering hosted by Paramount and Nickelodeon CEO Brian Robbins and his wife Tracy, with more than 20 guests said to have attended.
A source quoted in the report said Brooklyn and Ms Peltz found Harry and Meghan “kind, caring and generous” during the evening, while separate reporting also referenced claims that Beckham is considering a tell-all book in the mould of Prince Harry’s memoir. The Mirror article also reiterated earlier claims that David and Victoria Beckham’s friendship with the Sussexes cooled after allegations Harry and Meghan believed stories about them were being leaked to the press.
The renewed attention comes as Beckham’s feud with his parents has intensified, with the article repeating his claims that Ms Peltz was “consistently disrespected” and that he felt rejected around his father’s 50th birthday celebrations. The Mirror also reported a source close to David and Victoria said the couple felt “betrayed” by the no-show, and suggested Ms Peltz’s approach to family conflict differed from her in-laws’.
With both the Beckhams and the Sussexes under scrutiny for their public-facing family relationships, the revived details of the Montecito dinner underline how quickly private gatherings can become part of wider celebrity narratives.





