Melissa McCarthy: ‘I used to cry about why I wasn’t thinner or prettier’
LIFE as a 20-something is typically an emotionally tumultuous time, and for Bridesmaids star Melissa McCarthy it was no different.
Entertainment
Don't miss out on the headlines from Entertainment. Followed categories will be added to My News.
LIFE as a 20-something is typically an emotionally tumultuous time, and for Melissa McCarthy it was no different.
“In my 20s I used to cry about why I wasn’t thinner or prettier, but I want to add that I also used to cry about things like: ‘I wish my hair would grow faster. I wish I had different shoes,’” McCarthy told People for the magazine’s latest cover story. “I was an idiot ... It’s a decade of tears.”
Although the Tammy star now has the confidence to realise just how awesome she is, the 43-year-old isn’t immune to criticism.
“I’ve never felt like I needed to change. I’ve always thought, ‘If you want somebody different, pick somebody else.’ But sure, criticism can sometimes still get to me. Some things are so malicious, they knock the wind out of you.”
A recent article, for example, that referred to her as “America’s plus-size sweetheart” did not sit well. “It’s like I’m managing to achieve all this success in spite of my affliction ... Would you ever put that in the headline for a male star?”
As the female star of 2013’s Identity Thief, McCarthy faced scathing criticism from New York Observer film critic Rex Reed. Reed trashed her performance and attacked her on a personal level, calling her “tractor-sized,” “hippo” and “obese.”
After the article was published, McCarthy told the New York Times that had such hurtful criticism been levied in her 20s, “it may have crushed me.” But, as a mother of two daughters, she now knows negative comments like that “just add to all those younger girls, that are not in a place in their life where they can say, ‘That doesn’t reflect on me.’”
This article originally appeared in the Huffington Post.
Originally published as Melissa McCarthy: ‘I used to cry about why I wasn’t thinner or prettier’