Maren Morris files for divorce from Ryan Hurd after 5 years of marriage
Country music singer-songwriters Maren Morris and Ryan Hurd are calling it quits after five years of marriage.
Morris, who originally tied the knot with Hurd in March 2018, filed for divorce on Oct. 2 in Tennessee. She cited “irreconcilable differences” as the reason for the split.
Court records from Davidson County show Morris said the two were living together until the day of filing, along with their 3-year-old son, Hayes.
In her filing, Morris asked for their prenuptial agreement to be enforced and for joint custody of their son.
Morris, who welcomed her only son on March 23, 2020 in the early days of the pandemic, has been open about her ups and downs over the years.
In a Sunday Sitdown with TODAY’s Willie Geist, she revealed that after Hayes was born, Morris said she began to experience postpartum depression.
“I think a lot of identity crises happened there,” she told Willie in an interview that aired on Dec. 4, 2022.
She added that everything seemed to converge at once.
“Not just being a new parent and a new mother and dealing with postpartum depression for the first time, and reeling from that, and trying to like find the forest through the trees. But also just knowing my worth without someone clapping for me,” she said.
Morris went on to say that while she and Hurd were still writing music during that time, much of it was very sad.
She said her then-husband helped pull her out of her “pandemic doldrum.”
“He kind of just helped me in song form, and in just conversation form, figure out how to get to the light,” she said.
Since then, the singer spoke out aboutplastic surgeryand the unrealistic expectations placed on women tobounce back after giving birth.
She also recently announced she is taking a “step back” from country music.
In an interview on The New York Times “Popcast” podcast published on Oct. 4, Morris said she had realized she was in a “toxic” environment, working in the industry in Nashville.
“I don’t want to say goodbye, but I really cannot participate in the really toxic arms of this institution anymore,” she said, adding that she love Nashville in general, just not certain factions.
“We have amazing songwriters (in Nashville), so that’s not going to change. But I couldn’t do this, like, sort of circus anymore of feeling like I have to absorb and explain people’s bad behaviors and laugh it off. I just couldn’t do that after 2020, particularly,” she said. “I’ve changed. A lot of things changed about me that year.”
She added that she’s just “doing my own thing” these days and has asked her team not to submit her work for country music awards shows going forward.
“I’m not shutting off fans of country music. That’s not my intention” she said. “It’s just the music industry that I have to walk away — a few factions