Inside Freddie Mercury's Private World: Love Life, Alleged Daughter

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Woman Who Claimed to Be Freddie Mercury’s Secret Daughter Dead at 48

Countless books have been written about Freddie Mercury, making for a vast archive delving into his life, legacy and the music he made with Queen.

None of those tomes mentioned he may have had a daughter until 2025's Love, Freddie by Lesley-Ann Jones.

The woman known only as "B"—who, according to Jones, was the product of an affair Freddie had with a close friend's wife in 1976—has died, years after being diagnosed with spinal cancer. Her widower Thomas told the Daily Mail, "B is now with her beloved and loving father in the world of thoughts. Her ashes were scattered to the wind over the Alps."

Jones, who has authored several books about Mercury, wrote on X last year—in response to fans' demands for DNA evidence—that "requisite verification was obtained" before she went public with B's alleged revelation.

Meanwhile, no one outright denied the claim. Freddie, who died Nov. 24, 1991, of AIDS-related bronchopneumonia, was a flamboyant showman, but cautious about what he shared with the world off-stage.

He only confirmed he'd been living with HIV/AIDS the day before his death at 45, noting the "enormous conjecture in the press" during what turned out to be his final weeks.

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"I felt it correct to keep this information private to date to protect the privacy of those around me," he explained in a statement released by Queen's manager. "However, the time has come now for my friends and fans around the world to know the truth and I hope that everyone will join with me, my doctors and all those worldwide in the fight against this terrible disease. My privacy has always been very special to me and I am famous for my lack of interviews. Please understand this policy will continue."

But Mercury—born Farrokh Bulsara to a Zoroastrian family in what was then known as Zanzibar, now Tanzania—contained multitudes, creatively and personally.

For the first half of the 1970s he was in a relationship with Mary Austin, who worked in PR for a Kensington boutique and dated his bandmate Brian May before she fell for Queen's magnetic frontman. 

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Mercury proposed, but in December 1976 he came out to Austin as bisexual. Which she believed was not quite the truth.

"I'll never forget that moment," Austin told the Daily Mail in 2013. "Being a bit naive, it had taken me a while to realize the truth. Afterwards he felt good about having finally told me he was bisexual. Although I do remember saying to him at the time, 'No Freddie, I don't think you are bisexual. I think you are gay.'"

Mercury met hairdresser Jim Hutton in 1985, two years before the "Bohemian Rhapsody" singer tested positive for HIV/AIDS. They remained together for the rest of Mercury's life. (After testing positive for HIV in 1990, Hutton managed the diagnosis with medication before dying of lung cancer in 2010.)

Austin also remained a lifelong friend, one who to this day hasn't revealed the final resting place of Mercury's ashes, telling the Mail, "He didn’t want anyone trying to dig him up as has happened to some famous people. Fans can be deeply obsessive. He wanted it to remain a secret and it will remain so."

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And, as keeper of his secrets, she called the notion that Mercury had a daughter he didn't tell her about "not plausible."

"Freddie had a glorious openness,” Austin told the Sunday Times last year upon the release of Jones' book, “and I cannot imagine he would have wanted to, or been able to, keep such a joyful event a secret, either from me or other people closest to him."

But B said that Mercury had given her his private journals before he died, 17 volumes she in turn handed over to Jones.

“He entrusted his collection of private notebooks to me, his only child and his next of kin, the written record of his private thoughts, memories and feelings about everything he had experienced,” she told the Daily Mail last May. "After more than three decades of lies, speculation and distortion, it is time to let Freddie speak."

Meanwhile, Austin didn't say it was impossible that Mercury had a child. Rather, she told the Times, it would be "astonishing."

And that wouldn't be the first bombshell to blow your mind. Going by what Mercury and those closest to him have revealed over the years, read on for more about his private world:

Phil Dent/Redferns

The iconic Queen frontman, whose story was brought to life on the big screen by Rami Malek in the Oscar-winning 2018 biopic Bohemian Rhapsody, began life not as Freddie Mercury, but as Farrokh Bulsara.

Born in Zanzibar, an island off the coast of Tanzania (then a protectorate of Britain), on Sept. 5, 1946, Mercury's parents were Parsi, followers of the Zoroastrian religion whose ancestors came from Persia.

Bomi Bulsara, his father, was a high-court cashier for the British government, meaning that he, his wife Jer, Farrokh and their younger daughter Kashmira were able to live in cultural privilege, standing in stark contrast to much of their island home's population.

By the time their son was 8, in 1954, he was sent to St. Peter's Church of England School all the way in Panchgani, India, near his parents' home city of Bombay, now Mumbai. 

By all accounts, Mercury arrived at St. Peter's as a terribly shy child, self-conscious about the prominent overbite that earned him the nickname "Bucky." But he soon began to blossom, earning the more affectionate nickname of Freddie from his teachers as he began to develop his own tastes. 

"He was quite happy and saw it as an adventure as some of our friends' children had gone there," his mother told The Telegraph in 2011. "Right from the start, Freddie was musical. He had it on his mind all the time. He could play any tune. He could hear something and play it straight away."

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Four years into his studies at St. Peter's, he'd formed his first band with some classmates, known as the Hectics. And as Gita Choksi, a student at a neighboring girls school, recalled in Freddie Mercury: The Definitive Biography, when he hit the stage, he was shy no more. "He was quite the flamboyant performer," she said, "and he was absolutely in his element onstage."

Subash Shah, one of Mercury's friends, told journalist Anvar Alikhan in 2016, "Yes, Freddie was very shy. But he was also 'a born show-off,' and his entire personality would transform once he was performing. To give you one example: one evening, as teenagers, we were walking on a beach in Zanzibar. Music was playing and Freddie spontaneously started to do the twist, the popular dance move of the time. It was such a mesmerizing performance that the next thing we knew was that a group of conservative local girls, wearing burqas, had formed a circle around Freddie and began to twist with him."

"That was the power of his showmanship, even back then."

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It was at St. Peter's where questions over Mercury's sexuality began to form. "It was accepted that Freddie was homosexual when he was here," fellow student Janet Smith recounted in Lesley-Ann Jones' 2012 book Mercury: An Intimate Biography of Freddie Mercury. "Normally it would have been 'Oh, God, you know, it's just ghastly.' But with Freddie somehow it wasn't. It was OK."

Mercury returned to Zanzibar in 1963, the same year that British colonial rule ended, leading to a revolution on the island, with poor Africans targeting the wealthier Indian population. As a result, the Bulsara family fled to London, eventually settling in nearby Feltham, Middlesex.

Mercury enrolled at Isleworth Polytechnic in West London, studying graphic design. But he was soon caught up in the era of Swinging London.

"Most of our family are lawyers or accountants, but Freddie insisted he wasn't clever enough and wanted to play music and sing," his mother told The Telegraph in 2012, laughing. "My husband and I thought it was a phase he would grow out of and expected he would soon come back to his senses and return to proper studies. It didn't happen."

After transferring to Ealing Art College, where he earned his diploma in Art and Graphic Design, he met fellow student Tim Staffell, then the bassist in a band called Smile alongside guitarist Brian May and drummer Roger Taylor.

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In early 1969, Staffell introduced his new friend to the band. As Mercury grew closer to the group—selling odds and ends at a clothes stall in Kensington Market with Taylor, sharing a flat with both Taylor and May—he made it clear his ambition was to become their lead singer, even taking to yelling at their shows, "If I was your singer, I'd show you how it was done!" 

By early 1970, Staffell had decided to leave the group and in April, May and Taylor formed a new band with Mercury. Right away, he began to exert his influence on the group—which came to include bassist John Deacon—pushing them to dress more theatrically and insisting they name the band Queen.

"It was a strong name, very universal and very immediate," he would explain years later, according to Rolling Stone. "It had a lot of visual potential and was open to all sorts of interpretations, but that was just one facet of it."

It was around this time that he officially became Freddie Mercury. "I think changing his name was part of him assuming this different skin," May said in the 2000 documentary, Freddie Mercury: The Untold Story. "I think it helped him to be this person that he wanted to be. The Bulsara person was still there, but for the public he was going to be this different character, this god."

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As Queen was coming together, Mercury was also in the beginning stages of what would come to be one of his life's most defining relationships. 

In 1969, he was introduced to Mary Austin, an employee at hip West London boutique Biba. As May explained in the 2000 doc, he and Mercury would frequent the shop to get a look at the "gorgeous" employees. After May took Austin out on a date, Mercury took a liking to her, routinely visiting the store over five months before finally asking her out.

Initially, she found the "wild-looking artistic musician" intimidating, albeit fascinating. "He was like no one I had met before. He was very confident—something I have never been," Austin told The Daily Mail in 2013. "We grew together. I liked him and it went on from there."

They moved in together, and as Queen took off, life changed for the girl from a working-class family with two deaf parents. In December of 1973, five months after the release of the band's self-titled debut album, Mercury proposed to Austin.

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"When I was 23, he gave me a big box on Christmas Day. Inside was another box, then another and so it went on. It was like one of his playful games. Eventually, I found a lovely jade ring inside the last small box," Austin told Daily Mail. "I looked at it and was speechless. I remember thinking, 'I don't understand what's going on.' It wasn't what I'd expected at all. So I asked him, 'Which hand should I put this on?' And he said, 'Ring finger, left hand.' And then he said, 'Because, will you marry me?' I was shocked. It just so wasn't what I was expecting. I just whispered, 'Yes. I will.'"

To those in Mercury's inner circle, the relationship never made much sense—and not just because she was a woman. "She was the opposite of Freddie," Jones, who also toured with the band throughout the '80s, told Page Six. "She never really said very much." But Mercury's life was full of little compartmentalized selves, and Austin appealed to the homebody in him. 

And as he began touring the globe and exploring a side of himself that he couldn't quite verbalize yet, he never seemed keen on throwing a wedding. 

"Sometime later, I spotted a wonderful antique wedding dress in a small shop. And as Freddie hadn't said anything more about marrying, the only way that I could test the water was to say, 'Is it time I bought the dress?' But he said no. He had gone off the idea and it never happened," Austin recalled. "I was disappointed but I had a feeling it wasn't going to happen."

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By December 1976, five albums deep into Queen's career, Austin had noticed that Mercury was staying out and believed he might be having an affair with another woman.

It's during this time, Jones claimed in her 2025 book Love, Freddie, that he allegedly fathered a daughter known publicly only as B. According to Jones, Queen's songs “Bijou” and “Don’t Try So Hard” were written about B, the musician calling her his "trésor," French for treasure. 

But that's not the confession Mercury made to Austin in late 1976.

"I'll never forget that moment. Being a bit naive, it had taken me a while to realize the truth. Afterwards he felt good about having finally told me he was bisexual," she said. "Although I do remember saying to him at the time, 'No Freddie, I don't think you are bisexual. I think you are gay.'"

They carried on an unconventional routine for a time, where Mercury would be flanked on either side at dinner parties by Austin and his boyfriend of the moment.

"I always thought, how weird is that?" Jones said of the arrangement. "Go have a life. Don't stay glued to the hip to this person who...isn't going to be able to offer you a conventional ­relationship. After they separated, she even suggested to Freddie that they have a child together. Freddie told her that he would rather have another cat."

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Mercury bought Austin an apartment near his house and she remained on the payroll as something of his Girl Friday. Though she had two children with painter Piers Cameron and later wed (and divorced) businessman Nick Holford, Mercury considered her his person.

"All my lovers asked me why they couldn't replace Mary, but it's simply impossible," he famously said in a 1985 interview. "The only friend I've got is Mary, and I don't want anybody else. To me, she was my common-law wife. To me, it was a marriage."

In the late '70s, the band came to consider Munich their second home, and the city's diverse sex culture became a playground for Mercury. He'd begun a sexual relationship with his manager Paul Prenter, had a romantic relationship with German soft-porn actress Barbara Valentin and could hardly be bothered to be record. "He'd want to do his bit and get out," May would later recall.

Heading further into the '80s, Mercury's story becomes entangled with the AIDS crisis engulfing the gay community. How he contracted the disease that took his life remains a mystery. 

BBC DJ Paul Gambaccini recalled running into the singer one night in 1984 at a London nightclub, where he asked Mercury if AIDS had changed his attitude toward sex. His response? "Darling, my attitude is 'f--k it.' I'm doing everything with everybody," according to Rolling Stone. Said Gambaccini, "I had that literal sinking feeling. I'd seen enough in New York to know that Freddie was going to die.'"

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In 1985, after the band gave a career-revitalizing performance at that summer's Live Aid London concert, he got tested and the results were negative. He then abandoned the club scene and settled into a quieter life at his mansion in Kensington. "I lived for sex," he would later say. "I was extremely promiscuous, but AIDS changed my life."

After Prenter was fired and removed from Mercury's life, he retaliated by granting a 1987 tell-all interview with British tabloid The Sun, in which he outed Mercury and revealed his relationship with hairdresser Jim Hutton, whom the singer had been involved with since 1985, as well as his earlier blood test. This was also the year that Mercury got himself re-tested—with very different results.

With Mercury avoiding his doctor's many attempts to reach him, the office was forced to share the grim news with Austin. "I felt my heart fall," she would later say. Though the press was circling Mercury, looking for answers, he and the band closed ranks.

Inviting the group over in 1989, he said, "'You probably realize what my problem is,'" Taylor recounted. "'Well, that's it and I don't want it to make a difference. I don't want it to be known. I don't want to talk about it. I just want to get on and work until I f--king well drop. I'd like you to support me in this.'"

After, May recounted, "We all went off and got quietly sick somewhere, and that was the only conversation directly we had about it."

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By September 1991, after the February release of Queen's 14th album, Innuendo, Mercury was done with the race to record and retired to his home.

"He protected us by never discussing these matters," his mother told The Telegraph of his decision to keep them at arm's length. "It is quite different now, but back then it would have been very hard for him to tell us and we respected his feelings."

He stopped taking his medication, had several bouts of blindness, and was turning away most visitors, though Austin and Hutton remained by his side. He also continued to deny any reports that he had AIDS until November 23, 1991, when he issued a statement.

"Following enormous conjecture in the press, I wish to confirm that I have been tested HIV-positive and have AIDS. I felt it correct to keep this information private in order to protect the privacy of those around me," the statement read. "However, the time has now come for my friends and fans around the world to know the truth, and I hope everyone will join with me, my doctors and all those worldwide in the fight against this terrible disease." 

He died the next day at the age of 45.

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His funeral took place days later with Aretha Franklin performing at the Zoroastrian ceremony. And choosing to remain a mystery even in death, Mercury's body was cremated, with Austin—whom the musician left the bulk of his fortune and his mansion—charged with placing his ashes in a location she's never disclosed.

"One morning, I just sneaked out of the house with the urn. It had to be like a normal day so the staff wouldn't suspect anything—because staff gossip," she told Daily Mail. "They just cannot resist it. But nobody will ever know where he is buried because that was his wish."

Because the way Mercury saw it, some parts of life are better left as a mystery.

Mercury was once asked what "Bohemian Rhapsody" meant. "F--k them, darling," he said. "I'll say no more than what any decent poet would tell you if you dared ask him to analyze his work: 'If you see it, dear, then it's there.'"

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