Amanda Seyfried had to walk on set without underwear at 19: 'How did I let that happen?'


By AGENCY

Amanda Seyfried says she sometimes wishes she could come up in Hollywood now, when intimacy coordinators are required on sets and performers are encouraged to speak up. Photo: AFP

Amanda Seyfried is 36 years old and knows "who the (expletive) I am," thank you very much.

"There's a respect level that I have never felt so fully around me," the Emmy- and Oscar-nominated star told Porter magazine.

"It has nothing to do with any level of fame or recognition or critical acclaim. Whatever it is, it's not because of Mank, it's not because of The Dropout, it's not about having seen my movies."

Seyfried, who goes into next month's Primetime Emmy Awards ceremony with an acting nomination for her portrayal of disgraced Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes in Hulu's The Dropout, told the magazine that she sometimes wishes she could come up in Hollywood now, when intimacy coordinators are required on sets and performers are encouraged to speak up.

In reality, the Mamma Mia! star said she spent most of her 20s "just hating everything that came out of my mouth" and worrying she wouldn't have anything to offer acting-wise.

But, the Mean Girls and Les Miserables alum said she emerged from the industry's pre-#MeToo era "pretty unscathed", although she certainly felt some discomfort navigating it as a young adult. (This after she told Marie Claire earlier this year "that being famous young must really [expletive] suck.")

"Being 19, walking around without my underwear on — like, are you kidding me? How did I let that happen?" she said. "Oh, I know why: I was 19 and I didn't want to upset anybody, and I wanted to keep my job. That's why."

But as the longtime character actor closes what has been hailed as her career-best year, Seyfried told Porter that it's "surreal that we're here now" and to be nominated for an Emmy, not to mention her Oscar nod for David Fincher's Mank. She contends that she always wanted good, steady work more than recognition.

"I got singled out. I didn't spend any part of my career singled out, ever. [I had] no expectation of being singled out, and that's partly my self-deprecating nature. Never expecting anything great, preparing for the worst, but just continuing to walk on my path," Seyfried said, sharing that she's "uncrushable" about work and she has been able to keep herself grounded with family, a farm and therapy.

Other notable nuggets from the interview include how she felt about losing a role in Wicked to Ariana Grande and how she was "so proud" to go viral with Holmes' awkward dance set to Lil Wayne's How To Love. – Los Angeles Times/Tribune News Service

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