- Born
- Died
- Birth namePeaches Honeyblossom Geldof
- Height5′ 7″ (1.70 m)
- Peaches Geldof was born on March 13, 1989 in Westminster, London, England, UK. She was a writer, known for The King Is Dead (2010), 8 Out of 10 Cats (2005) and Celebrity Juice (2008). She was married to Thomas Cohen and Maxwell Drummey. She died on April 7, 2014 in Wrotham, Kent, England, UK.
- SpousesThomas Cohen(September 8, 2012 - April 7, 2014) (her death, 2 children)Maxwell Drummey(August 5, 2008 - 2011) (divorced)
- ChildrenPhaedra CohenAstala Cohen
- Parents
- RelativesPixie Geldof(Sibling)Tiger Lily Hutchence Geldof(Half Sibling)Fifi Geldof(Sibling)
- In 2000, her mother Paula Yates died of an accidental drugs overdose.
- Has two sisters: Fifi Geldof (b. 31 March 1983), Pixie Geldof (b. 10 September 1990) and half-sister Tiger Lily (b. 21 July 1996). All four girls lived with Bob Geldof, who won custody of his natural daughters and his ex-wife's orphaned daughter, Tiger Lily Hutchence Geldof.
- Bob Geldof had expressed sadness in a news article that he couldn't protect his daughter from heroin, the same drug that killed his ex-wife.
- Her mother Paula Yates died from heroin overdose at 41 when Peaches was 11. Peaches herself died from heroin overdose 13 years later.
- Gave birth to her second child at age 24, son Phaedra Bloom Forever Cohen on April 24, 2013. Child's father is her second husband Thomas Cohen.
- [on her name] "I hate ridiculous names, my weird name has haunted me all my life. I hate being called spoilt. My life is ordinary. I also hate being famous because people claim to know me because of my surname."
- [on discipline] "People are going to hate me for saying this, but I can see where parents are coming from when they impose a curfew. Since I turned sixteen, Dad's been quite reasonable and extended it to one in the morning. But I don't go out at all on weeknights because I have to get up at, like, seven."
- [on Michael Moore and his film Fahrenheit 9/11 (2004)] "I watched that film and I felt disgusted the way he was so biased. He completely ridiculed him [Bush] and it's just like when you're in a playground and you're bullying a little kid. I was for the Iraq war. I supported Bush completely. Of course, it's terrible that millions of people have died but if you think of Saddam Hussein and all the terrible things he's done, I mean, something doesn't come from nothing. Everyone at school, like, a lot of people knew nothing about the war and were wearing T-shirts saying 'F--- Bush' and saying 'Bush sucks'. I think people should be more informed before hating a person for something".
- No, [my family] are not Scientologists, but they're fine with it. My father says that anything that makes me happy and makes me feel like a better person is good.
- It's something that I agree with and it's something that, um, it's like I didn't, it's like, it's difficult to explain, it's like I was confused about what, um, path to go through and I felt like I needed to have a spiritual path, and I was thinking about it a lot, and looking at different things and like, you know, like, I always kind of felt like I didn't have, like I was lacking something when I didn't have a faith. Basically it's just, it's like ideas with pop psychology, like L Ron Hubbard's ideas and to do with the mind and, um, and in the end, like, all it's about, Scientology, is making yourself a better person, like, that's all it's about. It's just about working through stages and working with other people to really just be a fine, like, a calm person and it's really helped me in that way, like, I'm really, and I have good friends... who are Scientologists.
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