Is Hudson Williams in Open Relationship With Connor Storrie And Mystery Girlfriend?
A single photo can be a love letter or a reminder that some doors should stay shut.

Hudson Williams did what modern celebrities are supposed to do on Valentine's Day: he posted something sweet, slightly chaotic and just revealing enough to send the internet into its usual overcaffeinated spiral. Within hours, some fans were already trying to reverse-engineer the montage into a bigger story — up to and including the very 2026 question of whether a co-star cameo means an 'open relationship' plot twist.
It does not. Not based on anything Williams has actually said. What is on the record is simpler — and, in a way, more interesting: a performer learning, in real time, how to show affection publicly without surrendering a private life to strangers who mistake curiosity for entitlement.

Hudson Williams, Connor Storrie and a Valentine's Day Cameo
On Feb. 14, Williams used Instagram Stories to wish his still-unnamed girlfriend a happy Valentine's Day, posting a photo collage that resembled a small, curated window into a long-running relationship. Cosmo described the images as showing the pair 'cozy' in various everyday settings — lounging on a couch, smiling, FaceTiming, hugging — alongside a few shots that emphasised the warm, low-stakes intimacy fans tend to find disarming. Out similarly framed it as a 'sweet' post, featuring multiple images of the couple without revealing identifying details about her.
Then there is the moment that captured the most attention: Connor Storrie appearing in one of the pictures. Cosmo reports that Storrie appeared alongside Williams and the mystery girlfriend at what appeared to be a restaurant — a blink-and-you-miss-it cameo that nevertheless set social feeds buzzing. Out adds that Williams drew a heart over Storrie's face in the image, which reads less like a coded message and more like the kind of playful scribble one might make when a friend photobombs a romantic post.
Williams' caption did the rest of the work quietly, not loudly. 'Happy Valentine's Day,' he wrote, adding that she's been 'with me since my 2000 gold Mazda Protégé smoked and squealed and I had no job'. It is not the language of a publicity strategy; it is the language of someone remembering a slightly grim, oddly cherished chapter and placing his partner right in the middle of it.
Cosmo notes he did not say how long they have been together, though the post suggested she was in his life before his breakthrough with Heated Rivalry. And that, really, is the point: he is offering texture without handing over the whole map.

Privacy, Fandom and Hudson Williams, Connor Storrie in the Frame
If the internet's first instinct is to treat a relationship 'hard launch' like a puzzle box, Williams has made it clear he does not share the enthusiasm. Cosmo reports that, in December, he responded to social media chatter claiming he had a tattoo-artist girlfriend rumour attributed to Deuxmoi's Deux U podcast by writing, in a now-deleted comment, 'You know what, I've grown quite unfond of you deuxmoi,' as reported by Variety. Out repeats that same framing, quoting Variety's description of the backlash and Williams' response.
That small sentence is doing a lot of heavy lifting. It is irritation, yes, but it is also a boundary being drawn in public, where boundaries have a habit of being treated as invitations to push harder.
He has been even more explicit elsewhere. In a December interview with Deadline, Williams said: 'I think there's never a question for me, when I would dream of becoming in the public eye, that I would want just a level of privacy.' Reading that again, the fatigue beneath the politeness becomes clear: the desire to do the work, tell the story, meet the audience and still keep a door closed.
So no, a photograph featuring Hudson Williams, Connor Storrie and an unnamed girlfriend does not automatically suggest an open relationship. It suggests something more mundane and, frankly, more believable: a couple and a friend sharing space, with Williams letting the world see a corner of his life while still refusing to turn his partner into content. In celebrity culture, that kind of restraint can look like evasiveness — when it is actually just adulthood.
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