Ashley Tisdale hung out with Hilary Duff’s estranged sister Hayley Duff amid ‘toxic’ mom group drama.
On Tuesday, the food blogger shared a photo of the High School Musical actress’ eldest daughter Jupiter, 4, and youngest daughter Lulu, 7, playing under the table.
Hailey captioned the snap, “Under the table prank,” and Tisdale reposted it to his Instagram Stories.
Their playdate comes three weeks after Hayley sided with her sister Hilary, 38, amid her drama with Tisdale.
Earlier this month, the “One in This World” singer, 40, “liked” The Cut’s Instagram post promoting Tisdale’s divisive essay.
In her essay, the 40-year-old “The Suite Life of Zack and Cody” alum also criticized a group of several moms she was once friends with, including Hilary, Meghan Trainor and Mandy Moore.
Tisdale wrote about why she didn’t feel “cool enough” after being excluded from a get-together with a mom group.
“I realized that there were group text chains that didn’t include everyone, which led to the formation of cliques within the larger group,” she argued in the essay.
“And after seeing social media photos of other members joining hangouts they weren’t invited to for the third or fourth time, I felt like I wasn’t really part of the group after all.”
Some of the women in the group and their partners reacted subtly to Tisdale’s backlash, including the “Lizzie McGuire” alum’s husband Matthew Koma, who called Tisdale “the most self-centered tone-deaf person on the planet.”
Moore, 41, also made a cryptic comment about the show, saying she “had to grieve in a way” that some of her friendships had “changed.”
Meanwhile, it’s unclear why Hilary and Haley are no longer close. The sisters have not been photographed together in public since 2019.
Last week, the “Cinderella Story” actress gave rare insight into her feud with Hailey in her emotional new song “We Don’t Talk.”
“We come from the same home, the same blood,” Hilary sang at her show “Small Rooms, Big Nerves” at London’s O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire.
The former Disney Channel star said, “I want to go back to when I was a kid.”
“Let’s talk about it/I’ll hear you, you’ll hear me on the couch. …Let’s break it down/Tired of being so sad/Why won’t you talk about it when we don’t talk about it,” she sang.
“I don’t even know what it was,” she exclaimed. “If I did something different/Would you feel different?/Would you at least let me know your opinion?”
