EXPOSING Beyoncé’s BIZARRE ‘REAL Age’ Conspiracy (Her Parents REVEALED The TRUTH) – FULL DETAIL BELOW 

Why are there so many questions surrounding Beyoncé’s age?! Let’s get into it.

Hardly the rarest claim in showbusiness, but a conspiracy theory nonetheless. Beyoncé’s birth date is officially listed as September 4, 1981, making her 37 years old. But there’s a belief that she was actually born on September 4, 1974 – making her, at the time of writing, 44. Why? In 2006 someone who claimed to work for the Texas Department of Heath allegedly found her birth record. Plus there’s the fact few photos exist of an adolescent awkward phase, and the fact that her father once said in an interview that Pink, born in 1979 and Usher, born in 1978, was “the exact same as Beyonce”. But as conspiracy theories go, this one doesn’t really stand up.

The theory gets more twisty for those who believe the older Beyoncé gave birth to her sister, Solange. (Presumably these theorists are not the same ones who also believe her incapable of spawing Blue Ivy). According to the conspiracy, Beyoncé was 15 when Solange was born, but that doesn’t quite add up in this photograph of them as children:

The other members of Destiny’s Child were made to change their names

With Michelle Williams, middle, and Kelly Rowland

With Michelle Williams, middle, and Kelly Rowland

Destiny’s Child, the group managed by Matthew Knowles which dominated Beyoncé’s adolescence and the Nineties pop charts, may have had a hit with Say My Name, but some believe there was additional trauma lying behind that.

Knowles famously made the group an international success as well as a vehicle for his daughter’s stardom, and let little else get in the way. Including the birth names of Destiny’s Child members Tenitra and Kelendria. You may know them better as Michelle Williams and Kelly Rowland.

Beyonce

The teenagers were the third and fourth recruits to the band after original members LaTavia Roberson and LeToya Luckett were kicked out, and the theory goes that Knowles wanted Beyoncé’s limelight undiminished. Changing Williams’ and Rowland’s names helped make sure Beyoncé – whose unusual name was inspired by her mother’s maiden name, Beyincé – stood out.

Beyoncé died in 2000 and has since been replaced by a clone

Arguably one of the less readily subscribed to theories, but one that exists nonetheless. Little explanation is given for how, or indeed specifically when, Beyoncé died in 2000, only that canny producers decided to get hold of her stem cells and secretly perfect human cloning so that the money-making Beyoncé machine could continue after her death. Scant evidence exists in side-by-side photos where Beyoncé’s hairline and smile slightly differs with captions saying: “This high degree masonry witch is a cloned [sic]”.