Mick Jagger’s 82nd Birthday Post With His 8-Year-Old Son Is a Masterclass in Parenting Boundaries
Mick Jagger doesn’t post much about his youngest child. So when a rare photo of the rock icon and his 8-year-old son Deveraux made it into his birthday tribute this week, fans took notice.
In the final image of Melanie Hamrick’s Instagram carousel for Jagger’s 82nd birthday, the father-son duo sit side by side, both wearing blue sweaters, bunny ears, and open-mouthed grins. There’s fruit on the table. The lighting is soft. It looks like a quiet family moment — the kind that usually stays offline.
That restraint isn’t accidental. Hamrick, a retired ballerina and Jagger’s longtime partner, has been vocal about protecting their son’s privacy. “Family is so personal, and it’s a bubble,” she told Us Weekly in May. “It’s nice to share things, but… there needs to be a mystery.” She compared it to ballet — something sacred, best appreciated with a little distance.
That protectiveness became painfully necessary just over a year ago, when Hamrick had to publicly call out Instagram for failing to remove a fake account impersonating their son. “My seven-year-old son does not have an account,” she wrote at the time, calling the situation ‘completely disgusting’ and urging the platform to do better. The account was eventually taken down — but not before it crossed an already blurry line.
The couple’s approach stands out. Their son, born in 2016, rarely appears in public. Jagger, meanwhile, is a father of eight and a grandfather many times over. Earlier this year, his daughter Georgia May Jagger made headlines for modeling in a Zara campaign with her own infant son, Dean — already a cherub-faced breakout at just five months old. In this family, some kids end up in ad campaigns. Others wear bunny ears at breakfast. The point is: no one’s being pushed.
That boundary-setting has extended to other decisions, too. Jagger made waves last year when he confirmed he plans to leave the bulk of his reported $500 million fortune to charity, not his children. “The children don’t need $500 million to live well. Come on,” he told The Wall Street Journal, sparking backlash — and some admiration — online.
People will keep debating the money. But the birthday post with Deveraux speaks for itself. No stage, no statement, no spectacle. Just a dad showing up, with bunny ears and breakfast and zero need for approval.
Before you go, click here to find out who fights to keep paparazzi away from their partners and kids