Kelly Osbourne spent the day with her older half-brother, Louis Osbourne, and his two grown-up children, as the TV personality continues to mourn the loss of her father, Ozzy Osbourne.
The 41-year-old took to Instagram to share snaps from her family day out with Louis and his kids, Maia and Elijah, whom he shares with his wife, Louise. The group of four attended the Wes Anderson: The Archives exhibition at the Design Museum in London, and Kelly took a slew of photos to commemorate the occasion.
While Louis wore a simple black bomber jacket and black shirt, Kelly arrived in a babydoll-style dress, black bike shorts, a black leather jacket, fuzzy leg warmers, black boots and a Chanel handbag.
Louis is Ozzy’s son from his first marriage to Thelma Riley, which lasted from 1971 to 1982. Ozzy also welcomed a daughter, Jessica, with Thelma, and adopted her son from a previous relationship, Elliot.
The 51-year-old was close with his dad before he passed, and shared that the Black Sabbath star was a key figure in his children’s lives.
“Dad usually calls on a Sunday afternoon for a catch-up, and when he comes over to the UK, we take the kids down [to his home in Buckinghamshire]. Dad is great, very much a doting grandad,” he told Birmingham Live in 2015.
Louis, who is a producer, DJ and label owner, shared that seeing his dad onstage at the Back to the Beginning concert in July 2025 was an incredibly emotional moment for him.
See Louis support Sharon Osbourne at Ozzy’s funeral below…
“I was sobbing at times. It was everything we wanted it to be and more,” he wrote on Facebook. “I had been anxious for months about this, as I’ve been worried about my dad’s ability to perform with his Parkinson’s disease.”
“I just wanted it to be a dignified send-off for him. But as soon as he started singing, we knew he was gonna nail it,” he added. Ozzy passed away just weeks after the final show due to a heart attack.
Louis sat down with his half-brother, Jack Osbourne, on the Trying Not To Die podcast in November to marvel over the incredible impact Ozzy had on music and culture, as evidenced by the huge crowds that turned out for his funeral.
“The volume of people at the Cortege,” he remembered. “I still live in Birmingham, so I knew the street it was going to be on. Before we turned on the street, I thought it was going to be like two or three people deep for half a kilometer before where the Black Sabbath bridge was.”
“I’m getting goosebumps thinking about it,” he continued. “[There were] people climbing up hangposts, hanging out of windows, and standing on top of bus stops to get a look of it. It was awe-inspiring. Once we all got out of the cars to share our respects and put the flowers down, it kept on going for half a mile.”
“It’s been quite humbling in many ways,” Louis explained. “I’ve always known his music. Personally, I’m more of a Sabbath fan than I am of his solo work. I loved his solo work as well, but Sabbath is in my bones. I’ve come to terms with how much of a cultural impact he had.”
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