Nick Jonas Makes Rare Comment About Daughter’s ‘Mischievous Attitude’ & Compares Her to Wife Priyanka Chopra
The singer gushed over the little one’s sense of humor and more during a recent podcast interview.
Nick Jonas in the interview. Image Credit: Larry Marano/Shutterstock
Nick Jonas, 31, couldn’t help but praise his 10-month-old daughter Malti‘s personality, in a new interview. The singer compared the little one to his wife Priyanka Chopra, 41, and revealed she has a “mischievous attitude” and quite the sense of humor.
“It’s so encouraging to be around people like that [who don’t take themselves too seriously],” Nick said on the latest episode of theRead the Roompodcast. “I’m not talking about self-deprecating stuff, [but] like if you walk into a door, it’s funny. It’s not like, ‘Haha, you’re an idiot.’ It’s like, ‘We love you and we all saw it.’ I think it’s a really lovely quality to have in people. And obviously, my wife embodies that in spades.”
Nick and Priyanka at a previous event. (Shutterstock)
“We’re seeing it now manifest in our daughter in a way that is brilliant,” the proud dad continued. “Her sense of humor and her ability to laugh at situations, and even her mischievous attitude, it’s great.”
Nick also opened up about how life as a father has changed him. “You realize quickly once you have a child that you can’t control everything,” he said. “I think that was the biggest lesson for me at a stage in my life I didn’t expect to learn. … You know, we went through a really tough couple of months at the start of her life and you have that vision [of] how it’s going to go throughout your whole life, and then it’s something completely different. Then, every day from there is completely different and presents its own set of challenges.”
Malti has already been to Nick’s concerts with the Jonas Brothers on their tour and the “Chains” crooner also mentioned how having a baby has affected him physically. “I think this [new wrist injury] comes from holding our daughter,” he said. “I sort of do this thing where I become her seat and she just points to where she wants to go.”
“She likes to be looking forward when she’s being held and doesn’t like it to be an embrace,” he added. “It’s like you’re her ride. And now that she’s getting bigger, thank God, yesterday when I felt this pain in my wrist, I was trying to figure out where it was coming from. ‘Oh, it’s the baby’s fault.’”