Florence Pugh Once Threatened to ‘Lose Weight’ and ‘Change Face Shape’ to Make it in Hollywood

In a new interview, the ‘Don’t Worry Darling’ actress gets candid about her early days in the entertainment industry and admits to feeling horrified when she’s told to change her appearance.

AceShowbizFlorence Pugh has gotten candid about her early days in the entertainment industry. In a new interview, the “Don’t Worry Darling” star revealed that she was told to “lose weight” and “change the shape” of her face if she wanted a successful career in Hollywood.

The 26-year-old actress revealed she was horrified when she headed to Los Angeles as a teenager and industry bosses told her to make a number of changes to her appearance. She told The Telegraph newspaper, “I felt very lucky and grateful, and couldn’t believe that I had got this top-of-the-game job … [But] all the things that they were trying to change about me – whether it was my weight, my look, the shape of my face, the shape of my eyebrows – that was so not what I wanted to do, or the industry I wanted to work in.”

The actress’ first big role came in 2014 movie “The Falling” and she went on to land a part in a TV movie called “Studio City”, but Florence felt disappointed with her experience in the States and worried she’d made the wrong career choice. She went on, “I’d thought the film business would be like [my experience of making] ‘The Falling’, but actually, this was what the top of the game looked like, and I felt I’d made a massive mistake.”

However, Florence continued with her acting career back in her native U.K. and she scored a leading role in 2016’s “Lady Macbeth” and she said the project made her “fall back in love with cinema.” She added, “I think it’s far too easy for people in this industry to push you left and right. And I was lucky enough to discover when I was 19 what kind of a performer I wanted to be.”

Florence went on to insist she wants to tackle roles that focus on her acting ability rather than her appearance, explaining, “When I could be naked at whatever size I was, and bare-faced, and the acting could speak for itself. There’s nothing for people to be distracted by: they can’t be like, ‘Oh, I don’t like the make-up.’ It was a wonderful reminder, ‘Oh, yeah – this is who you are.’ “

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