Billy Ray Cyrus on Elizabeth Hurley: ‘This feels like something real’

Two photos of Billy Ray Cyrus and Elizabeth Hurley, one of them headed to an event and another where they're embracing in a chair, via Instagram
Billy Ray Cyrus’s new album, The Hill, drops on June 16. It’s named for a hill on his Tennessee property where his mother is buried. His mother’s passing partially inspired the album, which is his first original material in over a decade. Billy Ray sat down for a cover interview with People to promote The Hill. He spoke about his music, making amends with his children, and a recent health scare. He also talked about his relationship with Elizabeth Hurley. Here are some excerpts:

On going back to work: “I had entered a period where I hadn’t worked for a really long time. And then I realized today, I said, ‘Cyrus, you’re working now, man. Be careful what you ask for. You said you wanted to get on the ride? Well, here you go.’ ”

34 years sober: “I am the most sober person in the world. I did drink a lot until 1992, and I just quit. After 10 years of failure and being told no, I finally got a record deal, and that inner voice said, ‘This is going to happen, but you have to stop drinking.’ So I just stopped.”

Why it took so long for him and Tish Cyrus to get divorced: “Sometimes change is scary, and I’ll keep doing the wrong thing for a long time because I’m scared of change. But when I finally do get the courage up to commit in my mind and say, ‘I’m going to do this,’ then that’s the way it is. No looking back. I think that’s maybe sometimes good for everyone—to just let go.”

Family is complicated: [W]hile he may joke that he was “never going to be parent of the year,” Cyrus’ pride in the adults his kids have grown up to be is apparent. “Life is a series of adjustments, and I think my family always knew that. We’ve all been through a lot, and we’ve seen a lot. Whatever happened is in the rearview mirror,” he says. “The past is over and done. The future is what we have, and we got to look forward.”

Plus, the family that plays together stays together: [His 32-year-old son] Braison produced and helped co-write The Hill, Noah duets with her dad on the record with track “On Our Way Along,” and Cyrus joined Miley to tape Disney+’s Hannah Montana 20th Anniversary Special in February. “All these years later it’s going back to our roots as a family,” Cyrus says. “And to be in this moment with them, it’s just a great celebration of our family.”

He was hospitalized with sepsis: That family also supported him through recent health crises. The country veteran was diagnosed with vocal paralysis in 2024 — following what he describes as a near-fatal bout of sepsis that left him hospitalized before a “miracle” recovery. The youngest member of his family, Braison’s son Bear, 5, also gave him [a] new perspective when he was still trying to find the light.

“In this very broken moment of my life, my little grandson Bear looked at me and said, ‘Try again.’ And up until that moment, he had never spoken to me at all. I wasn’t even sure if he knew my name. In that moment I thought, ‘He’s telling you something.’ Is it about love? Music? Somehow, I got to try again at both. So I’m learning to try again.”

His relationship with Liz: He says leaving Tennessee for the first time in five years to travel internationally with Hurley was the “craziest thing” he’s ever done, “but,” he adds, “I had to do it. This feels like something real.”

He’s in a good place: “What more could I ask for? I don’t have anything to complain about. I like how everything looks right now. I finally found this wonderful place where I’m happy.”

[From People]

It’s nice that BRC and Liz found one another. They felt like such a random pairing at first, but now, they seem like a good match. It’s hard to believe they’ve only been together for just over a year. We’ve seen so much of them over the last year that it feels like they’ve been together for longer. It’s also nice that Billy Ray’s been working on repairing his relationship with his kids. That family is full of hillbilly drama, but they seem like a group of imperfect people trying to work their sh-t out.

Also, Billy Ray’s story about battling sepsis is so scary! That’s the first time he’s mentioned it publicly. I had a friend whose dad died from sepsis several years ago. They got him to the hospital as soon as possible, but it was still too late. Sepsis is on my list of scary medical conditions that can initially be mistaken for something else. Meningitis and hantavirus are also on that list. I’m really glad BRC survived and recovered.

Damian Hurley, Elizabeth Hurley and Billy Ray Cyrus attends The Olivier Awards 2026 with Cunard at The Royal Albert Hall in London, England. UK. Sunday 12th April 2026

Billy Ray Cyrus's People Mag cover with the title I'm Learning to Try Again

Photos via Instagram and credit: James Warren/Bang Showbiz/Avalon

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10 Responses to “Billy Ray Cyrus on Elizabeth Hurley: ‘This feels like something real’”

  1. Not a subject says:

    I just came here to say that liz hurley’s son and billy ray both scare the beejezus out of me. They look like lip gloss wearing vampires! lestat

    • Lucy says:

      He looks like Johnny Depp (deroagtive) now to me. Infinite scarves and weird layers to cover his dark heart.

  2. Normades says:

    That lady has the most random picker. She’s absolutely gorgeous and seems like a fun person so I can see what they see in her but what does she see in them? There doesn’t seem to be a common denominator

    • Nana says:

      No one could accuse Liz of having a “type,” Shane Warne being case in point. I remember her speaking of how much fun she had in her time in Melbourne with him… surely he must have been the polar opposite of Hugh Grant.

  3. Dizzy says:

    I’m a little disappointed we’re not sharing the ailments that scare the bageezus out of us. I’ll go second, meningitis. Up walking around totally fine one day, find and smoke half finished cigarette- 2 days later people are crying asking “what happened?” This happened to a friend of my sisters. So scary! No thank you!

    • Rosie says:

      Oh gosh, I’m so sorry to hear about that. I’m always paranoid whenever I get a headache or if I wake up with a stiff neck.

  4. Elsa says:

    I’m with you on the scary illnesses. My father-in-law died of sepsis in 24 hours. I’m terrified of hantavirus because I have a farm in the country and we fight mice all the time. I don’t even like to go there now. And meningitis is so scary. Let’s don’t mention the brain eating ameba (spell?) that is in water everywhere.

    • Rosie says:

      @Elsa – Oh yes, I forgot all about brain-eating amoebas. Ahhh. I’m so sorry for the loss of your FIL.

      Meningitis has always made me paranoid of every headache or stiff neck.

  5. Lucy says:

    The “haven’t left Tennessee in 5 years” bit is so jarring, that really is a hillbilly move. They really did this article thing without mentioning Fire Rose (or Ember Rose? It was made up, whatever it was). He just got divorced that one time and then had sepsis and his 5 year old grandson, stage name Bear, he’d had no contact with said something profound that saved his life. Ok boomer.

    Sepsis is no joke, that’s what’s k*lling the women miscarrying in the no ab*rtion states. It also is what took Kyle Busch out.

    • Rosie says:

      @Lucy – People mentioned it as part of their narration, but the article didn’t have any good quotes from Billy Ray about it. They did not refer to her as Firerose, though. They called her by her full legal name.

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