18 celebrities who sparked outrage with their Halloween costumes

offensive celebrity halloween costumes

Ashley Benson dressed as a sexy version of Cecil the Lion, Hedi Klum as a Hindu goddess, and Ashley Tisdale as a sexualized skull image used by Mexicans to honor dead relatives.
Ashley Benson/Instagram; Joe Corrigan/Getty Images; Ashley Tisdale/Instagram
  • Celebrity Halloween costumes can be creating and entertaining.
  • But sometimes they're just really racist.
  • Heidi Klum, Kylie Jenner, Scott Disick, and OJ Simpson are among the celebrities who have had very, very bad Halloween costumes.
  • Visit Insider's homepage for more stories.

Celebrity costumes can be inventive and works of creative inspiration.

Or they could be empty-headed disasters.

The worst celebrity costumes tend to be the ones that spark outrage for their cultural insensitivity. Bizarrely, this isn't limited to Halloween. Macklemore once dressed up as a Nazi caricature of Jews in May 2014, declined to apologize for it, and then deleted his statement that wasn't an apology.

But because a lot of people dress up in costumes for Halloween, this type of thing tends to happen around the end of October.

Too often, we'll see celebrities dress up in blackface, as caricatures of other cultural figures, or wear a costume that's supposed to be some kind of witty commentary on a recent horrific event. They're all really bad ideas.

Here are 18 celebrities who dressed up in the most outrageous costumes.

Julianne Hough's blackface for her "Crazy Eyes" costume was one of the most derided in years.

Julianne Hough in blackface.
Splash News

For her 2013 costume, the "Dancing with the Stars" champion went as "Orange Is the New Black" character Crazy Eyes.

There's a history of blackface in the US, wherein white actors don black makeup in order to portray black stereotypes.  There's also a history of discrimination against African-Americans in the country's movie, television, and theater industries. Taken together, Hough's costume was in really, really bad taste.

"It certainly was never my intention to be disrespectful or demeaning to anyone in any way," Hough said shortly after the Halloween party. "I realize my costume hurt and offended people and I truly apologize."

Hough is far from the only celebrity to wear blackface as part of a Halloween costume. "American Horror Story" actor Colton Haynes dressed up as Kanye West in 2011. The following year, he darkened his skin again for a Gandhi costume. Country singer Jason Aldean once went as Lil Wayne. And designer Alessandro Dell'Acqua went as... well, it's not clear, but she used blackface in her 2016 costume.

Snowboarder Shaun White dressed up as a caricature of people with disabilities.

Shaun White in his "Simple Jack" costume.
Shaun White/Instagram via HuffPost

In October 2108, Shaun White dressed up as "Simple Jack," a character played by Ben Stiller in "Tropic Thunder." In the movie, the character iss used to make fun of the movie industry's tendency to turn the lives of people with disabilities into "Oscar bait," although disability advocates found the portrayal shallow.

A spokesperson for the Special Olympics, as well as fans of White, criticized him for the costume after he posted a photo of it on Instagram. White ultimately issued an apology.

"I owe everyone in the Special Olympics community an apology for my poor choice of Halloween costume the other night," he said in an Instagram post Tuesday. "It was a last minute decision. It was the wrong one."

White said the Special Olympics, which also criticized "Tropic Thunder" in 2008, was right to criticize him.

"The Special Olympics were right to call me out on it," he said. "They do great work supporting so many tremendous athletes and I am sorry for being insensitive. Lesson learned."

In 2012, Chris Brown dressed up as a "terrorist."

Chris Brown dressed as a terrorist.
Ultrawig / Splash News

In a now-deleted post on Instagram, Brown posted a photo of himself and friends dressed in turbans with fake beards. "Ain't nobody F---ing wit my clique!" he wrote in the caption.

"Someone take him to a little house way out in the country and give him some food and water and just leave him there," The Atlantic wrote. "Because he's simply too aggravating to be out here with the rest of us."

Heidi Klum angered a lot of Hindu leaders when she dressed up as the goddess Kali.

Heidi Klum in 2008
Getty/Joe Corrigan

Klum is renown for putting a lot of effort into her Halloween costumes, but that's not always a good thing. Her 2008 costume was Hindu goddess Kali.

Hindu and Indian-American leaders were incensed.

"Goddess Kali is highly revered in Hinduism and she is meant to be worshipped in temples and not to be used in clubs for publicity stunts or thrown around loosely for dramatic effect," said Hindu cleric Rajan Zed.

Hillary Duff and her then-boyfriend athlete Jason Walsh dressed up as a pilgrim and Native American stereotype.

Hillary Duff and Jason Walsh in October 2016.
Michael Kovac/Getty Images

Duff and Walsh donned the costumes in 2016, at the same time that Native Americans were protesting the Dakota Access Pipeline, which is planned to go through sacred Native American grounds.

"I am SO sorry to people I offended with my costume. It was not properly thought through and I am truly, from the bottom of my [heart] sorry," Duff tweeted.

Duff and Walsh aren't the only ones to go with that costume style on Halloween. Paris and Nicky Hilton have also gotten in trouble for dressing up as stereotypical Native Americans, in different years,

"Pretty Little Liars" actress Ashley Benson dressed up as a sexy version of a beloved and recently-murdered lion.

Ashley Benson as a sexy version of Cecil the Lion.
Ashley Benson/Instagram

The year 2015 was a tough year for animal lovers, with the deaths of both Harambe the Gorilla and Cecil the Lion. Benson went ahead and barreled along anyway with a "sexy Cecil the Lion" costume.

"Help! Can't decide on my Halloween costume this year! What do you guys think of this Cecil the Lion costume?," she posted on Instagram.

Later, she revised the post to remove Cecil's name.

"Yesterday's post was in poor taste and I absolutely regret all of the hurt that photo caused," she posted the next day. "The caption that was posted was incorrect and my costume was not Cecil the Lion, when I saw that, I contacted my management who handled the post and had it immediately changed."

As it turned out, it was meant to be an advertisement for Yandy's "Sexy Cecil the Lion costume," since renamed "Sexy Lion Costume." Benson said she would donate the money she made from the Yandy deal to the World Wildlife Fund.

Chrissy Teigen was criticized for dressing up as a Native American in 2008.

Chrissy Teigen and John Legend in 2008.
Splash News

Her now-husband John Legend was a cowboy, implying a "cowboys and Indians" theme.

Ashley Tisdale was accused of sexualizing an image Mexicans traditionally use to honor dead relatives

Ashley Tisdale and musician Christopher French dressed up for a Halloween party in 2016.
Ashley Tisdale/Instagram

For last year's Halloween, Tisdale wore face makeup and an outfit that's reminiscent of a decorated skull for Día de los Muertos. The "Day of the Dead" is a Mexican celebration that honors deceased relatives. It's held near Halloween each year. Some of the commenters on her Instagram photo of the costume were mad about it, particularly since it appeared to sexualize the holiday.

The skull image, also known as La Catrina, was originally meant to mock the elite whose political policies "were resulting in hunger and starvation for 90% of the Mexican populace," Virginia Commonwealth University professor of religious studies Andrew Chestnut told Refinery29.

"The skeleton is the representation of the death of the policies this dictatorship was having in Mexico," he said.

La Catrina may be creepy to people who aren't familiar with it, but that doesn't mean it makes sense for Halloween.

The Chainsmokers dressed up as "Ebrola" in the middle of the Ebola epidemic that killed thousands of people.

The Chainsmokers as "Ebrola."
UpstateCreate/YouTube

In 2014, the Chainsmokers EDM duo Andrew Taggart and Alex Pall performed at Binghamton University, and later performed a private set at an off-campus fraternity. The theme was "Ebrola," a bro-ish take on the ebola epidemic in West Africa that had killed more than 5,000 people at that point in the year. They dressed up in hazmat suits and mustaches, as if they were health workers, and were roundly criticized in the local press.

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