Natasha Lyonne ‘REMOVED from Delta flight’ hours after jaw-dropping appearance at Euphoria season 3 premiere

Natasha Lyonne was reportedly removed from a Delta flight after flight attendants did not respond to requests for her to close her laptop and fasten her seatbelt.
Page Six Lyonne, 47, reportedly appeared “out of it” as she prepared to leave Los Angeles on Tuesday, hours after attending Euphoria’s third season premiere in Hollywood.
The incident comes three months after Lyonne announced she had a relapse after nearly 10 years of sobriety.
Lyonne was sitting in first class and was still wearing some of the same clothes she wore at the premiere when the series started.
An eyewitness observed Lyonne being given instructions by multiple flight attendants, and the actress reportedly fell asleep during the crash.
At one point, after apparently being startled, he was heard telling the flight attendants: ‘Oh! ‘You scared me!’
Natasha Lyonne was reportedly removed from the flight after flight attendants did not respond to asking her to close her laptop and put on her seatbelt – Photo taken at the Euphoria season 3 premiere on April 7
Lyonne was reportedly sitting in first class when she was kicked off a Delta flight; Stock photo of Delta flight in 2014
The staff eventually managed to retrieve his laptop, and the plane headed toward the runway before returning to the gate, where a Delta employee boarded the plane to speak with Lyonne.
‘Ma’am, do you need medical attention?’ staff reportedly asked Lyonne. ‘Ma’am, you need to get off the plane. Do you need help with your belongings?’
‘Where are we?’ he was heard asking.
‘We’re still in Los Angeles. ‘The plane didn’t go anywhere,’ they said. ‘The plane isn’t going anywhere until you land.’
According to Page Six, Lyonne “coldly silenced” the employee before heading to the bathroom and walking out to grab a bag of bagels for a snack.
After his luggage was collected, he obediently left the plane.
The captain later explained that they were dealing with a passenger who was unable to follow ‘basic commands’ when addressing the over an hour delay with the passengers.
“For whatever reason…we have a passenger who did not comply with some basic commands…We had a passenger who did not appear to be fit for duty tonight, so they were asked to book another flight – I apologize for the inconvenience, but we will get you to New York as quickly and safely as possible,” the captain was quoted as saying.
Earlier in the evening, Lyonne shocked fans as she walked the red carpet flaunting her braless breasts in a fishnet top as she wrapped up her role in Euphoria alongside Brian Grazer.
The Daily Mail contacted Lyonne’s representatives for comment but did not immediately receive a response. Delta declined to comment.
Accordingly TMZLyonne was scheduled to appear on The Drew Barrymore Show the next day but was unable to make it.
Earlier in the evening, Lyonne shocked fans as she walked the red carpet flaunting her braless breasts in a fishnet top as she wrapped up her role in Euphoria.
The incident took place three months after he announced his relapse.
“She made my relapse public, more to come,” Lyonne told her 545.5 thousand followers who showered her with support.
“Thanks boss…for the blessing etc,” the actor wrote in response to a supportive comment. ‘Sending love back your way. She could be a brunette or a nun. TBD.’
The incident comes three months after Lyonne announced she had a relapse after nearly 10 years of sobriety – the photo was taken on April 7
An eyewitness observed Lyonne being given instructions by multiple flight attendants, and the actress reportedly fell asleep during the crash. At one point he was heard telling flight attendants: ‘Oh! ‘You scared me!’ – The picture was taken on January 4 in Los Angeles
Lyonne did not give an exact time frame for when and how the relapse occurred, but emphasized that ‘recovery is a lifelong process.’
His written message on Saturday, January 24, continued: “If anyone out there is struggling, remember that you are not alone.”
‘I’m grateful for love and smart feet. I’m going to do this for baby Bambo. Be honest, guys. ‘As sick as our secrets.’
The Orange is the New Black alum added: ‘If no one told you today, I love you. No matter how far we go, we will see how our experiences can help someone else. Go ahead guys. Don’t give up before the miracle. Turn your mind into wallpaper with love. ‘The rest is all noise and nonsense.’
‘I love you,’ she wrote to one devotee, and to another, ‘We need better systems and we need to end the shame – bill the Sacklers and stilettos and stuff but don’t text me because I’m honest.’
He was referring to the infamous Sackler family, best known for owning Purdue Pharma, which developed the highly addictive pain medication OxyContin and reaped billions of dollars from its sales.
Last year, the company was forced to walk away from a $7.4 billion settlement due to its role in the current opioid epidemic.
In March, she offered an update on her sobriety journey: “Proud to report that this kid is doing much better and is back on his feet,” she posted to X.
Lyonne, who completed rehab in 2006, previously talked about her descent into drug and alcohol addiction in a candid interview with Entertainment Weekly in 2012.
‘Turning into addiction is really scary,’ he said. ‘Some things have a scientific impact from A to B. For example, alcohol is a depressant. Cocaine is a stimulant. And then: Cocaine plus heroin is bad! That’s the point of my story, that’s the moral. Coke plus heroin equals speedball. Speedball also means bad, you know?
‘It’s weird talking about it,’ he said at the time. ‘I was absolutely dead, you know? A lot of people don’t come back. This makes me feel cautious and shy. I wouldn’t want to be proud of it. ‘People actually gathered around me and pulled me up by my boots.’
The New York City native said on social media in January that she was feeling better after a relapse
Lyonne was making headlines throughout the early to mid-2000s, but it wasn’t pretty: a DUI arrest, a court appearance with her neighbor, a hospitalization for hepatitis C, a collapsed lung and infective endocarditis, and later open-heart surgery to repair the damage.
In 2006, at the age of 27, he checked into a residential rehabilitation center for treatment of drug and alcohol addiction.
“I was finally able to get through those dark nights of my soul,” Lyonne told The Times in 2024.
Lyonne has seen a career resurgence in her 40s, and has recently shifted her focus from leading roles to directing, writing, and producing; for example, the boxing movie Bambo, set in the 1980s.



