
When Jazmine Sullivan appeared on stage during Ari Lennox’s Vacancy Tour in a packed Philadelphia venue on a Sunday night in late May 2026, the audience went crazy. She had on a form-fitting black latex catsuit. The next morning, people who had followed her career for almost 20 years reacted on social media with a mix of admiration and disbelief, double-tapping photos from the show and wondering if they were real. One fan made a hilarious reference to her breakthrough single from 2008: “Somebody car windows busted out.”
The discussion about Jazmine Sullivan losing weight has actually been going on for several years—quietly at first, then suddenly. Simply put, the dramatic appearance at the Ari Lennox show was the most recent and obvious instance of a metamorphosis that started with a choice based on something much more intimate than conceit. Sullivan decided to go vegan with her mother, Pamela, after learning that she had breast cancer. This act of solidarity, which most people never discuss in public, changed Sullivan’s body over time. She dropped from about 230 pounds to 180 pounds, losing about fifty pounds. The change happened gradually enough that many fans thought it happened overnight.
Sullivan’s description of the event is notable for what she leaves out. She doesn’t describe a training schedule, give credit to a specific program, or frame it as a fitness journey in the sense of a motivational poster. In 2021, she told Essence that she and her mother had decided to become vegan and more active together, and that her motivation was different from aesthetics. She had previously eaten pork and bacon, she said without apology, and the decision to switch to plant-based eating was motivated by family rather than how she appeared in pictures. She also talked about dealing with issues related to female reproductive health, such as fibroids, and how the dietary change had actually made her feel better. In a sense, the physical change was an aftereffect of a more pressing issue.
Nevertheless, the criticism arrived. When Sullivan shared pictures from the set of her “Lost One” music video in October 2020 while wearing a form-fitting grey and black dress, some of her online fans reacted by calling her sickly-looking and speculating that she had lost too much weight. On Instagram Stories, she directly addressed it, saying, “I’m honestly a size 12. 180 pounds.” My neck is the only part of me that is skinny. But because I’m 5’8,” I occasionally appear a little thinner than I actually am in photos. It was a calm, measured, and precise response that revealed something about her attitude toward public commentary: she will participate and correct the record, but she isn’t acting upset about it.
This place has something worthwhile to sit with. Sullivan navigated the particular attention given to curvaceous Black women in the music industry for years while receiving praise for her voice. Depending on the direction of change, this attention alternates between praise and criticism. Her curves were a part of her public persona when she was heavier. People said she was sick when she lost weight. It’s a well-known dynamic, and she appears to have established a distinct boundary between the noise and her own interpretation of it.
On July 22, 2023, her mother passed away at the age of sixty-four. Sullivan wrote in a birthday message to fans that she had been “down bad” in ways that were beyond words, and she has been candid about the grief that followed, including a miscarriage she had around the same time. Both her body and her music seem to have been affected by this grief and her ongoing dedication to the way of life she had established with her mother. There’s something subtly poignant about seeing her leave Philadelphia, still at 180 pounds, still a size 12, and still clearly herself. One story is told by the weight loss. The explanation for it reveals a completely different story.
