Victoria Beckham's claim to a working-class childhood was playfully challenged by her husband David Beckham in their Netflix documentary, Beckham.
He teasingly corrected her, pointing out that her father drove her to school in a Rolls Royce, contradicting her claim.
Fans paid heed to the amusing interaction. Later, in an interview with Vogue Australia, Nicole Kidman questioned Victoria about the Rolls Royce to clarify the narrative.
Victoria looked pleased with Nicole's curious demeanor.
She wanted to know: "Did you really get driven to school in a Rolls?" Victoria answered, "You know, my father had a Rolls-Royce and a white van. I come from a working-class family, and my father was an entrepreneur in the 1980s; he began his firm with my mother at the kitchen table and performed extremely well, so he got himself a Rolls-Royce."
She went on to say, "We went to a regular school and didn't live in a big house, and the moment he made money, he went and bought himself a Rolls-Royce." We'd go to school in the Rolls-Royce one day and then in the van the next because he was still working; he was an electrical wholesaler and a hard worker.
She went on to say, "My siblings and I would beg him to let us go to school in the white van. We were embarrassed by the thought of riding in the Rolls-Royce. How things have changed! Nowadays, I'd say, "Don't worry about the van; let's get in the Roller!" But back then, all we wanted was to fit in.
Following the release of the Beckham documentary, social media was awash with comments about Victoria and David's enjoyable relationship.
Someone another responded: "Well she wasn't called posh spice for coming from a council estate was she."
Another individual stated, "David Beckham is coming in as a live Twitter troll."
And a third reader added, "Hahaha, I love Beckham even more for calling her out on that."