The actor is best known for playing the role of Finnick Odair in the Hunger Games franchise, but his Hollywood debut came several years earlier in Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides. Sam ...
Sam Claflin has admitted that showing his body on camera hasn’t always been a comfortable experience for him. Sam Claflin discusses body dysmorphia struggles worsened by Hollywood’s pressure for ...
Warning: this article discusses body dysmorphia which some readers may find distressing. Sam Claflin has shared how he struggles with his self image after working in Hollywood for the past 15 years - ...
Body dysmorphia is real, and Hollywood is not a stranger to this issue. Over the years, stars like Billie Eilish, Lili Reinhart, Robert Pattinson, and many others have been vocal about their struggles ...
“It’s a mesmerizing ballet,” said Cervilio Miguel Amador. “Truly magical.” Amador, artistic director of Cincinnati Ballet, is talking about “Swan Lake,” which will hit the Music Hall stage Feb. 13-21.
With more than 15 years since his acting debut, Sam Claflin admittedly still has insecurities about seeing himself onscreen. The Golden Globe nominee confessed he’s “incredibly insecure” as an actor, ...
Sam Claflin revealed on Fearne Cotton’s “Happy Place” podcast (via The Independent) that his body dysmorphia was exacerbated by his Hollywood acting roles, which often required him to appear shirtless ...
Sam Claflin – best known for his roles in The Hunger Games and Daisy Jones & The Six – has shared an honest insight into his struggles with mental health, revealing that he often experiences feelings ...
British actor Sam Claflin has spoken openly about living with body dysmorphia, telling Fearne Cotton that he remains "incredibly insecure" about his appearance and has struggled with the condition ...
The Hunger Games star Sam Claflin is opening about his struggles with body dysmorphia. “I’m incredibly insecure,” Claflin, 39, who played Finnick Odair in the hit franchise, said during a Monday, ...
Australian writer-director Natalie Erika James hitches eating disorders and corporeal revulsion to the East Asian cultural concept of the Hungry Ghost. By David Rooney Chief Film Critic Obsessively ...