After seven years away from music, Lily Allen has returned with West End Girl, a record as unflinching as it is elegiac.
Conceived over ten feverish days in collaboration with musical director Blue May last December, during her separation from Stranger Things actor David Harbour and her move to New York, the album chronicles heartbreak, betrayal and renewal with Allen’s characteristic blend of wit and vulnerability.
At its emotional core lies Madeline, the song that has sent the internet into a frenzy of speculation.
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Since its release, listeners have been captivated by the identity of the mysterious “Madeline.” Allen, who split from Harbour in December, references her twice—first in Tennis, then in Madeline itself—both songs confronting the theme of infidelity with lyrical precision.
In Tennis, she sings:
“So I read your text, and now I regret it / I can’t get my head ’round how you’ve been playing tennis / If it was just sex, I wouldn’t be jealous / You won’t play with me and who’s Madeline?”
Later, in Madeline, she delves deeper:
“How long has it been going on? Is it just sex or is there emotion? / He told me it would stay in hotel rooms, never be out in the open.”
Lily Allen and David Harbour in 2024. Image: Getty
Who Is The Real ‘Madeline’?
Soon after the album’s release, Natalie Tippett, a 34-year-old costume designer from New Orleans, came forward claiming she had an affair with Harbour, 50.
According to reports, Tippett met Harbour while working on the Netflix film We Have A Ghost in 2021, where he played the lead. Their alleged relationship began during production and continued afterward, with Harbour reportedly flying her to his home in Atlanta.
Speaking to Daily Mail, Tippett admitted she had heard Allen’s new music. “Of course I’ve heard the song,” she said.
“But I have a family and things to protect. I have a two-and-a-half-year-old daughter, and I understand this is going on. It’s a little bit scary for me.”
When asked whether her private messages had inspired the lyrics, she replied, “Yeah. I just don’t feel comfortable talking about it at the moment.”
Fans have since noticed several clues connecting Tippett to the narrative. She and Harbour still follow each other on Instagram, and Madeline’s closing line, “Love and light, Madeline,” echoes Tippett’s free-spirited online persona.
Allen, however, has denied her lyrics are about any one person. Speaking to The Times, she said Madeline was “a fictional character”. When asked if she was a “construct of others”, Allen said: “Yes”.
Image: Instagram / @natalie_tippett
The mystery may have captured attention, but Allen’s album runs deeper than a single name.
Across fourteen tracks, Allen deftly intertwines confession and critique, offering what she describes as “a mixture of fact and fiction” that traces the disintegration of a marriage and the slow reconstruction of self. Musically, it moves between glossy hyper pop and tender, reggae-inflected ballads, capturing a woman sifting through the emotional wreckage of her former life.
“The record is vulnerable in a way that my music perhaps hasn’t been before, certainly not over the course of a whole album” Allen said in a press statement.
“I’ve tried to document my life in a new city and the events that led me to where I am in my life now. At the same time, I’ve used shared experiences as the basis for songs which try to delve into why we humans behave as we do.”
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