Key Points
- Zellweger fears intimate relationship details will be exposed if negligence suit goes to trial.
- Plaintiff alleges she tripped on a rug covering a patio hole at their Laguna Beach rental.
- Trial set for June could compel testimony, increasing Zellweger's anxiety and straining her relationship.
ACTRESS Renée Zellweger likes her life locked down tighter than a Hollywood NDA — but now a messy courtroom showdown threatens to rip the curtain wide open.
Sources say the notoriously private Oscar winner is “horrified” that intimate details of her relationship with British TV star Ant Anstead could be dragged into public view as a lawsuit over an alleged accident at their California rental home barrels toward trial.
And insiders tell the National Enquirer the looming legal drama is piling serious pressure on the couple.
The drama began when a woman filed a negligence lawsuit claiming she was injured while visiting the couple’s Laguna Beach property. According to the filing, the visitor allegedly tripped over a thin rug covering a hole in the patio, falling and injuring her knee.
The case — set for a jury trial this June — is seeking damages and could force both Renée and Ant to testify.
That’s the part sending the famously private actress into meltdown mode.
“Renée works incredibly hard to keep her life out of the spotlight,” a source said
“The idea of sitting in a courtroom, being cross-examined about her home and personal life with Ant — with the media watching — is basically her worst nightmare.”
Friends say the situation is deeply unsettling for the 56-year-old star, who has spent years carefully controlling how much of her life becomes public.
“Renée’s terrified that private details about their relationship could end up in headlines,” the insider says. “That loss of control is what really scares her.”
Ant, 46, reportedly feels awful that the situation has spiralled into a legal mess.
“He hates seeing Renée this stressed,” the source says. “She’s not blaming him, but it’s still putting strain on things because it’s causing her so much anxiety.”
The pressure has apparently pushed the normally low-key actress even further into hiding.
“She’s become even more housebound,” the insider adds. “It’s not healthy.”
For a star who built her career playing lovable characters like Bridget Jones, the idea of her private life becoming courtroom entertainment is about as far from the spotlight as she ever wanted to be.
But unless the case settles before June, Renée may soon discover that Hollywood privacy doesn’t mean much once a lawsuit hits the docket.
Why This Matters
The case highlights how lawsuits can strip celebrities of privacy, forcing high-profile figures like Zellweger to potentially disclose intimate details in public testimony, intensifying media scrutiny, personal stress and relationship strain while setting a precedent for future celebrity legal fights.