Current:Home > ScamsLena Dunham won't star in her new Netflix show to avoid having her 'body dissected' -MarketEdge
Lena Dunham won't star in her new Netflix show to avoid having her 'body dissected'
View
Date:2025-04-17 17:25:46
Lena Dunham is making decisions that are best for her mental health and creativity.
In a New Yorker interview published Tuesday, the "Girls" alum, 38, revealed how she's protecting herself by remaining behind the camera in her upcoming semi-autobiographical Netflix rom-com series, "Too Much." Dunham is co-creating the 10-episode project with her husband, Luis Felber, and it stars comedian Meg Stalter (HBO's "Hacks") and Will Sharpe (HBO's "White Lotus").
"I knew from the very beginning I would not be the star of it. First, because I had seen Meg Stalter’s work, and I was very inspired by her. She’s unbelievable; I think people are going to be so blown away. We know how funny she is," Dunham told The New Yorker.
"I also think that I was not willing to have another experience like what I’d experienced around 'Girls' at this point in my life. Physically, I was just not up for having my body dissected again," she added. "It was a hard choice — not to cast Meg, because I knew I wanted Meg, but to admit that to myself.
"I used to think that winning meant you just keep doing it and you don’t care what anybody thinks. I forgot that winning is actually just protecting yourself and doing what you need to do to keep making work."
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
Though known for on-camera roles such as Hannah Horvath on "Girls" and Cat in 2012's "This is 40," Dunham has leaned into directing, writing and producing (2022's "Catherine Called Birdy," Max show "Generation") in recent years.
"I got into this because I wanted to be an artist. I actually was never a person who — as much as people may not believe this, because of the way that my work is structured and what it’s about — was unbelievably interested in attention," Dunham said. "What makes me feel powerful is making my work. It’s the only thing I want to do. It is my only love in life aside from the people who are closest to me and my pets and books."
This summer, Dunham returned to the screen in the movie "Treasure," which marked her first acting role in seven years.
Why Lena Dunham left the Lilly Collins 'Polly Pocket' movie
In the New Yorker interview, Dunham also revealed that she is no longer attached to an upcoming movie about Polly Pocket after working on a script for three years.
The move was in part due to writer and director Greta Gerwig's "incredible" feat with the last summer's phenomenon, "Barbie."
"I’m not going to make the Polly Pocket movie. I wrote a script, and I was working on it for three years," Dunham said. "I think Greta [Gerwig] managed this incredible feat [with 'Barbie'], which was to make this thing that was literally candy to so many different kinds of people and was perfectly and divinely Greta."
She continued, "And I just — I felt like, unless I can do it that way, I’m not going to do it. I don’t think I have that in me. I feel like the next movie I make needs to feel like a movie that I absolutely have to make. No one but me could make it. And I did think other people could make 'Polly Pocket.'"
'Resentment toward women':Lena Dunham looks back on 'Girls' body-shaming
In a statement to USA TODAY Wednesday, a Mattel spokesperson said, "Polly Pocket is in active development, and we look forward to sharing updates on the project soon. Lena is a remarkable writer and creator and we wish her all the best!"
The live-action movie, announced by Mattel Films and MGM Studios in June 2021, was described as a story that "follows a young girl and a pocket-sized woman who form a friendship." Lily Collins was cast as the micro-doll Polly and is also producing the project.
Dunham also lauded filmmaker Nancy Meyers for her taste, which "manages to intersect perfectly with what the world wants," and the late writer/director Nora Ephron, a mentor who encouraged Dunham to, "Go be weird. Don’t kowtow to anyone."
Though the multi-hyphenate is also working on another Netflix show about "the idea that organizations like the C.I.A. and M.I.6 are tapping college students in, earlier and earlier," she sees her next commercial project as "another romantic comedy."
"My New Year’s resolution this year was, like, 'I’m going to try to think more commercially thirty-seven percent of the time, just because it’s an interesting challenge,'" she said.
veryGood! (7256)
Related
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Bachelorette’s Jenn Tran and Jonathon Johnson Address Relationship Speculation
- Most students in a Georgia school district hit by a shooting will return to class Tuesday
- Jana Duggar Details Picking Out “Stunning” Dress and Venue for Wedding to Stephen Wissmann
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Former Alabama corrections officer sentenced for drug smuggling
- Rebecca Cheptegei Case: Ex Accused of Setting Olympian on Fire Dies From Injuries Sustained in Attack
- Why Selena Gomez Didn’t Want to Be Treated Like Herself on Emilia Perez Movie Set
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Amber Alert issued in North Carolina for 3-year-old Khloe Marlow: Have you seen her?
Ranking
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Shop Lands’ End 40% Sitewide Sale & Score $24 Fleeces, $15 Tanks & More Chic Fall Styles
- Gossip Girl's Taylor Momsen Goes Topless, Flaunts Six-Pack Abs on Red Carpet
- Gossip Girl's Taylor Momsen Goes Topless, Flaunts Six-Pack Abs on Red Carpet
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Amber Alert issued in North Carolina for 3-year-old Khloe Marlow: Have you seen her?
- Unionized Workers Making EV Batteries Downplay Politics of the Product
- Who is David Muir? What to know about the ABC anchor and moderator of Harris-Trump debate
Recommendation
Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
Elon Musk says human could reach Mars in 4 years after uncrewed SpaceX Starship trips
Wife of California inmate wins $5.6 million in settlement for strip search
When heat hurts: ER doctors treat heatstroke, contact burns on Phoenix's hottest days
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Courts in Nebraska and Missouri weigh arguments to keep abortion measures off the ballot
How Aaron Hernandez's Double Life Veered Fatally Out of Control
Jennifer Coolidge Shares How She Honestly Embraces Aging