Anne Hathaway Recalls Subtly Being Told to Lose Weight For a Role When She Was Just 16

During an interview with Allure, the Oscar winner opened up body inclusivity in Hollywood

By Jamie Blynn Aug 13, 2019 1:54 PMTags
Anne Hathaway, Allure

Back in 1999, a young—and eager—Anne Hathaway landed her first gig on the short-lived drama series, Get Real. (The Princess Diaries came soon after, don't worry.) But rather than celebrate, she was subtly told to focus on her body.

"At 16 years old, it was ‘Congratulations, you have the part. I'm not saying you need to lose weight. I'm just saying don't gain weight,'" the Oscar winner recalled to Allure for their September issue. "Which, of course, means you need to lose weight."

Now, two decades later, the 36-year-old is still thinking about her figure albeit in a more positive light. Take, for example, her experience on set of her latest flick, The Last Thing He Wanted.

"I have [costume designer] Ane Crabtree asking me what my body does on my moon—which I realized meant my period—and so she can make adjustment for me," Hathaway said. "It was just this beautiful thing."

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Anne Hathaway's Best Roles

However...

"I am cautious in my praise of how Hollywood is shifting," she noted. "There is so much more body inclusivity—which is great!—but the thin thing is definitely still the centralized ‘normal' expectation."

For the upcoming thriller, she was actually asked to pack on 20 pounds, which, she told Allure, she happily agreed to. Alas, while prepping for the part, she still had to, of course, shut down body shamers.

"I am gaining weight for a movie role and it is going well," Hathaway wrote to her Instagram followers last year. "To all the people who are going to fat shame me in the upcoming months, it's not me, it's you. Peace xx."

Now, looking ahead, the pregnant star—she is already mom to Jonathan Rosebanks Shulman, 3—is optimistic. Especially when it comes to women a making change in Hollywood. 

"It's more nuanced, and it's more interesting," she admitted. "It's allowed for more interesting characters and stories. Now the big question is are audiences appreciating it? If it's not supported, it won't continue. It will go back to the way it was, and people will say, ‘Okay, that didn't work.'"

The September issue of Allure hits newsstands on August 20.