Unlike other stories about public individuals, the coming-out story of Anna Camp didn’t truly happen all at once. Over the course of the majority of 2025, a number of little public decisions were made, each of which hinted at a somewhat more significant one. A February TikTok video with Camp and a young woman called Jade Whipkey standing next to each other and responding to questions about their worst dates was the first indication.
“Well, I don’t expect anything,” Camp responded to the TikToker when asked what they anticipate from a man on a first date. “Not anymore, because I like women, and it’s great,” he said, pointing to Whipkey. It was a casual line. It wasn’t implied. The change was noticeable to anybody following the Pitch Perfect actress’s public life, including her marriage to fellow Pitch Perfect alum Skylar Astin from 2016 to 2019.
| Anna Camp and Jade Whipkey — Key Information | Details |
|---|---|
| Anna Camp’s Age | 43 |
| Camp’s Best-Known Role | Pitch Perfect trilogy (Aubrey Posen) |
| Recent Project | Bride Hard (2025) |
| Co-star | Rebel Wilson |
| Camp’s Previous Marriage | Skylar Astin (2016 to 2019) |
| Girlfriend | Jade Whipkey |
| Whipkey’s Age | 24 |
| Whipkey’s Profession | Writer and on-set stylist |
| Whipkey’s Notable Clients | Keke Palmer, Coco Jones, Lena Waithe |
| First Public Appearance | February 2025 TikTok video |
| Soft-Launch / Confirmation | May 2025 |
| Red Carpet Debut | June 2025, Bride Hard premiere, Los Angeles |
| Out Magazine Interview | October 16, 2025 |
| Public Coming Out as Bisexual | March 2026 |
| Reference Reporting |
For public personalities managing these kinds of revelations, the relationship’s speed through 2025 followed a specific pattern. Camp’s Instagram had a limited opening in March, with Whipkey included in a number of images with the message, “Happiness lately happening.” The official Instagram confirmation was produced by May. June staged the red carpet premiere of Camp’s action-comedy Bride Hard in Los Angeles.
Rebel Wilson, who is a member of a specific generation of out gay Hollywood actors, co-stars in the film. The choice to make their relationship debut at the screening of Camp’s own movie was a well-thought-out exposure move with several implications.
To put things in perspective, Whipkey is not a famous person. She is a 24-year-old Los Angeles-based writer and on-set stylist who has collaborated with Lena Waithe, Keke Palmer, and Coco Jones. The kind of literary captions one might anticipate from a practicing writer are evident in her Instagram presence.
In a gentle Instagram debut post, she wrote, “Her smile is a poem, her eyes are roses, her laugh is music for dancing.” Online comments about Camp and Whipkey’s 18-year age difference was predictable, with a lot of it being critical, some of it being sharp, and nearly all of it being the kind of thing that celebrities from every generation have learned to expect when their relationships don’t fit the mold.
Camp’s forthright answer to the criticism revealed how at ease she had grown with the attention. “I just wanted to go on here and say that Jade is far more mature than any of the males I’ve dated who are exactly my age. We can basically chat about anything and everything, and we have more in common than anyone I’ve ever dated.
I’m wishing everyone well, especially this Pride month, and I believe that everyone has the right to express their opinions. It was intentional to switch from defending the particular relationship to inspiring pride. Camp wasn’t merely standing up for Whipkey. She was admitting that, in ways she was still getting used to, her public persona had changed.

In an interview with Out Magazine in October 2025, Camp provided what may be the most concise explanation of the larger shift. “I just wanted to let you know that it’s never too late to become your best self. I learned that by taking off the mask of armor I had made for myself in order to survive and navigate. I wasn’t truly living; I was just getting by.
And at last, I feel like I’m growing into the real Anna—living, breathing. A particular aspect of how midlife coming-out journeys differ from younger ones is captured by the “real Anna” concept. The kind of complexity that the earlier generation of public coming-out tales frequently avoided mentioning explicitly is the remorse Camp described—guilt for not embracing it sooner, mixed with the exhilaration of finally being free.
Observing Camp’s actions over the past year gives me the impression that her chosen path is one that doesn’t quite fit the traditional Hollywood models of celebrity disclosure. TikTok, the soft launch, the red carpet, the Out interview, and her eventual announcement as bisexual in March 2026 were all part of the slow public evolution that allowed her to discover the vocabulary for an identity she was still coming to terms with rather than the language she felt required to perform.
The intimate aspect of what was going on concurrently was encapsulated in Whipkey’s birthday tribute to Camp in September 2025: “Dancing in your kitchen after our first date to now dancing in aquariums and really anywhere with or without music is a constant dream come true.” I adore what we are creating and I adore you, sweetie. It’s a sincere relationship. It has been carefully chosen in terms of public visibility. By all accounts, both women are writing the next chapter at their own pace rather than the audience’s preferred time.