
In the sixth season premiere of What We Do in the Shadows, Natasia Demetriou’s fiery, centuries-old Greek Romani vampire Nadja is shown wandering through a shed while carrying a bucket. Viewers noticed it because it’s an odd enough detail. A few chuckled. Some silently wondered, “Wait, is she hiding something?” as they exchanged glances. Yes, as it happened. She most definitely was. Furthermore, it wasn’t a plot device or a vampire relic. There was a baby bump.
The tale of Natasia Demetriou’s pregnancy and the online speculation about her weight gain that preceded any formal confirmation offers an odd glimpse into how the internet acts when it observes a woman’s body changing, and no one has explained. Speculation began to circulate in forums and fan communities back in 2023 when Demetriou made appearances at various events and on screen, appearing somewhat different than before. There was some good in it. Not all of it was. People were openly discussing her body without really knowing anything about what was going on in her life, and the consensus that arose from various parts of Reddit was not very flattering.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Natasia Charlotte Demetriou |
| Birthplace | London, England |
| Nationality | British |
| Education | University of Leeds (Acting) |
| Occupations | Actress, Comedian, Screenwriter |
| Best Known For | Nadja in What We Do in the Shadows (FX, 2019–2024); Sophie in Stath Lets Flats (Channel 4) |
| Notable Work | Ellie & Natasia (BBC); The Big Flower Fight (Netflix); Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga |
| Brother | Jamie Demetriou (comedian and actor) |
| Children | One child, born 2024 |
| Social Media | Largely absent; very private personal life |
| Awards | BAFTA winner (via Stath Lets Flats, 2020) |
| Reference Website | Wikipedia – Natasia Demetriou |
Demetriou just didn’t engage with that conjecture, so it didn’t yield any answers at the time. The typical path to clarification, such as a casual Instagram post or a brief comment in a story, was unavailable because she had already distanced herself from social media. By all accounts, she was one of the most private people who regularly appeared on television in both the United States and Britain. In today’s entertainment world, such a purposeful exclusion from public discourse is so uncommon that it merits recognition. The majority of people in her situation are drawn to being visible all the time. It didn’t seem to bother her at all.
As usual, there was no drama when the confirmation arrived. Demetriou was reportedly several months pregnant and actively trying to hide it when Vulture visited the set in April 2024, during the last few weeks of filming for the sixth and final season of the show. In one scene that was observed, she had a pillow in her lap. She told the outlet that learning a complete toolkit of concealment techniques, such as carrying a bucket, standing behind a fruit bowl, and precisely positioning a box, was necessary for the process. It’s the kind of logistical ingenuity that sounds almost comical when put simply, but it also illustrates how dedicated the production was to keeping her pregnancy completely out of the plot, in line with her own clear desire to keep it out of the media.
The difference between the two events—the 2023 conjecture and the 2024 confirmation—and what bridged that gap are what make this worth considering. During that time, a large amount of content on the internet featured people confidently evaluating Natasia Demetriou’s weight gain without any supporting data. There were some sympathetic threads. Some weren’t. Even though she didn’t show any signs of being pregnant in 2023, it’s still possible that the timeline of rumors was more accurate than anyone realized at the time. However, the natural tendency to remark, conjecture, and form judgments about a woman’s body based on screenshots and appearances on the red carpet outpaced any factual information.
It’s difficult to ignore how recognizable that pattern is. Demetriou is not alone; almost every public figure with any level of visibility experiences it, and women are typically the most affected. There has been real progress in the entertainment industry’s years-long effort to depart from the more aggressive body commentary that typified tabloid culture in the 2000s. However, online communities have their own rhythms, and the underlying impulse continues to find new venues despite the disappearance of old tabloid habits.
Demetriou’s strategy, which consists of total silence, no clarifications, corrections, or Instagram acknowledgments, is the cleanest response anyone has ever managed. She didn’t resist. She didn’t act transparently. In a mockumentary about a Staten Island vampire, she simply continued to work, film, conceal herself behind ever-more-complex props, and wait for the story to come to a satisfying conclusion. 2024 saw the baby’s birth. The show came to a lovely conclusion. A statement was not owed to anyone.
Over the course of six seasons, What We Do in the Shadows developed Nadja into one of the most genuinely humorous and strangely poignant characters in contemporary American comedy television. Demetriou’s sharpness, melodrama, and unexpected tenderness all contributed to the role’s genuine wit. Many people consider the last season of the show to be one of its best, regardless of what the production team did to accommodate her pregnancy. Something about that seems almost appropriate. The work benefited from the intersections between the personal and professional spheres that were never discussed in public.
If Demetriou were speaking in public at all, that might be precisely the point she would make. She isn’t, of course.
