Miley Cyrus branded her marriage to Liam Hemsworth "a f****** disaster" as she helped a couple get engaged during her set at Lollapalooza Brazil.

Miley Cyrus admitted her marriage to Liam Hemsworth was a 'disaster'

Miley Cyrus admitted her marriage to Liam Hemsworth was a 'disaster'

The 'Midnight Sky' hitmaker played the festival in São Paulo on Saturday night (26.03.22) and brought a gay couple up on stage for the proposal.

After congratulating the pair, she remarked: "Honey, I hope your marriage goes better than mine, mine was a f****** disaster."

The 29-year-old pop icon - who also announced her new live album, 'Attention: Miley Live', is set for release on April 1 during her set - split from the 'Hunger Games' actor in August 2019, less than a year after they tied the knot.

And Miley previously admitted she had "too much conflict" in her marriage.

She said: "There was too much conflict….When I come home, I want to be anchored by someone.

“I don’t get off on drama or fighting.”

The 'Prisoner' singer got engaged to Liam in May 2012, but they split in September 2013, before reuniting in 2016.

And she didn't know if she and the 32-year-old actor would have gone through with tying the knot if it hadn't been for the devastation of her home in Malibu being destroyed in a fire in 2018.

She said: "We were together since 16.

“Our house burned down.

"We had been like, engaged - I don’t know if we really ever thought we were actually going to get married, but when we lost our house in Malibu - which if you listen to my voice pre- and post-fire, they’re very different so that trauma really affected my voice.

" And I was actually in South Africa, so I couldn’t come home, and like, my animals were tied to a post at the beach. I lost everything. I had polaroids of Elvis, like front row, passed on from, I got a couple grandmas to give me their Elvis polaroids. I always became friends with my friends’ grandmas so I could get the goods from the artists I love.

“I had so much and it was all gone, every song I had ever written was in that house.

“Every photograph of me that my parents had given to me, all my scripts, I lost everything.

"And so in trying to put that back together, instead of going, ‘Oh, nature kind of did something I couldn’t do for myself; it forced me to let go,’ I ran toward the fire.

"Which is not abnormal, a lot of animals do this and end up dying, like deers run into the forest. You’re attracted to that heat and me being an intense person and not wanting to sit with it, and not wanting to go, you know, ‘What could be purposeful about this?’ I just clung to what I had left of that house, which was me and him."