Minnie Driver recently disclosed the condescending comment she received while auditioning for her role in Good Will Hunting, effecting her morale, in a memoir, Managing Expectations.
Speaking to The Cut, Driver revealed she was only 26 years old when she was told by a producer of the movie that she was not attractive enough to “play Matt Damon’s on-screen girlfriend”.
“It was devastating,” the 52-year-old stated.
She went on to add that to be told at such young age that you are “not pretty enough when you maybe just got over all your teenage angst”, and began to think good about your look was quite demoralising.
"I certainly had insecurities growing up. That I was not gorgeous. I was not super pretty," she told the magazine.
However, the actress divulged that it was her family who stopped her from trying to “find ways of making myself prettier”.
It is pertinent to mention that this was the same performance that earned Driver an Oscar nomination for best supporting actress.
Meanwhile, the Circle of Friends star also described the annoyance she felt “when a producer distilled an actor down to what they perceive as their sexiness, it’s so dismissive of that person”.
Adding to this, Driver noted that this has not changed yet as people still commented on looks of how she’s “too old” or “too tall”.
“I have always thought about how things get distilled. There’s this notion of one part of you being the thing that will block all these other aspects of who you are and that’s a huge disappointment as a performer,” she concluded.
Christopher Knight says 'I was terrified' while recalling the moments of iconic show 'The Brady Bunch'
Netflix to open first ‘Netflix House’ locations in Dallas and Philadelphia by 2025
Rick Ross shocks fans with his latest collaboration with Indian singer Guru Randhawa
Victoria Beckham's admirers assume she's moulding her daughter, Harper Beckham into next Kim Kardashian
Travis Kelce gets slammed on social media after NFL game on Monday
Kanye West finds his upcoming biopic titled 'In Whose Name' 'very deep'