TLDR
After Brazilian soccer star Jorginho Frello accused Chappell Roan’s team of making Jude Law’s daughter cry at a Sao Paulo hotel, the pop singer denied directing security and issued a public apology to the family.
A Breakfast Sighting Turns Sour
For Jude Law’s young daughter Ada, the day was supposed to start with music-fan magic. According to Instagram posts by her stepfather, Brazilian soccer star Jorginho Frello, the 11-year-old woke up thrilled to spot Chappell Roan at their hotel in Sao Paulo.
Frello wrote that Ada even made a handmade sign because she was so excited to see the artist she admired. He said the girl quietly walked past Roan’s breakfast table, smiled to confirm it was her, then returned to sit with her mother, singer Catherine Harding.
Moments later, Frello claimed, a large security guard approached his wife and stepdaughter and began speaking in what he described as an extremely aggressive tone. He alleged the guard accused Ada of harassment and disrespect, threatened to file a complaint with the hotel, and left the child terrified and in tears.

Roan Denies Ordering Security Confrontation
Hours later, Roan opened her own Instagram Stories and, speaking from bed, said she needed to share “my half of the story” about what happened. She stressed that the guard involved was hotel security, not part of her personal team.
Chappell Roan responds to explosive allegations she made Jude Law’s daughter cry — and blames security guard Brazilian soccer star Jorginho Frello blasted the singer for causing his stepdaughter, Ada Law, to break down in tears at a hotel in Brazil. https://t.co/1OGPdgJX3B pic.twitter.com/2CnRN7Xbvm
— NahBabyNah (@NahBabyNahNah) March 22, 2026
“I did not, and they did not come up to me,” the “Good Luck, Babe!” singer said, explaining that she never saw a woman and child near her table. “No one bothered me. I was just sitting at breakfast in my hotel.”

Roan pushed back on the idea that she is hostile toward fans or children. “It is unfair for security to just assume someone does not have good intentions when they have no reason to believe,” she said, adding, “I do not hate children, like, that is crazy.”
Although she denied asking anyone to intervene, Roan still addressed the family directly. “I am sorry to that mother and child that someone was assuming that you would do something,” she said. “If you felt uncomfortable, that makes me really sad. You did not deserve that.”
Jude Law’s Family Caught in Crossfire
The dispute places a young fan and a famous family at the center of a debate about celebrity boundaries. Ada is the daughter of Jude Law and British singer Catherine Harding, who welcomed her after their relationship ended and now co-parents alongside Harding’s husband, Jorginho Frello.
For Roan, who has built a fast-rising career and devoted fan base on the strength of “Pink Pony Club” and “Good Luck, Babe!”, the episode touches a fragile part of her image. Frello ended his message with a pointed reminder that “without your fans you would be nobody” and urged admirers to reconsider their affection.
The singer’s apology, paired with her firm denial that she ordered the confrontation, highlights the tightrope every modern star walks. Security teams are hired to anticipate threats, but when their instincts collide with quiet hero worship from a child, the fallout lands not on a guard, but on the name at the top of the marquee.
Where do you think the line should be drawn between protecting celebrities’ privacy and honoring the quiet admiration of young fans who just hope to glimpse their heroes?