Amanda Seyfried recalls doing nude scenes at 19
Amanda Seyfried skyrocketed to fame in the mid-2000s with roles in “Mean Girls” and “Veronica Mars,” but she sure regrets her early roles.
Now 36 years old, the actress recalled the start of her career, calling out one uncomfortable incident in which she was naked on set as a teen.
“Being 19, walking around without my underwear on – like, are you kidding me? How did I let that happen?” Seyfried told Porter magazine without divulging which role it was.
“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.”
However, the “Mamma Mia” star said she emerged from Hollywood’s pre-#MeToo time “pretty unscathed.”
The actress, who got her start on “All My Children” and “As the World Turns,” also got candid with Marie Claire in May about the creepy interactions she had with male fans after “Mean Girls” premiered in 2004.
Her character, Karen Smith, famously believed that she could predict the weather by holding up her breasts, an anecdote Seyfried said men would use as a pickup line.
“I always felt really grossed out by that,” Seyfried noted. “I was like 18 years old. It was just gross.”
She also recounted the early fear of being typecast as the “the pretty blonde” character — however, her worries were avoided when she scored the role of Sarah Henrickson in the 2006 HBO drama “Big Love.”
“I remember for one movie — I can’t say the name — it was between me and some model for a kind of ancillary character,” she recalled. “And I was like, ‘Oh God, it doesn’t matter who it is! And if it doesn’t matter, I don’t know if I want to be a part of it.’ But at the same time, I wanted to work, and I wanted to work with the actors involved.”
“Luckily, I then had opportunities that went a different way pretty quickly, and I’m grateful for that,” Seyfried added.
Now, she’s finally feeling respected after two decades in showbiz, telling Porter it’s all thanks to getting older.
“There’s a respect level that I have never felt so fully around me,” she said. “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. I’m respected because I’m 36 years old and I know who the f–k I am.”
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