Thu, 11 Jun 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jan 7, 2025 · 12:08
Hollywood News Updated Jan 7, 2025

Florence Pugh feels she abused herself while working on folk-horror 'Midsommar'

Florence Pugh recently got candid about her transformative experience filming Midsommar, revealing the deep emotional challenge of portraying her character Dani. She openly discussed how the role pushed her to psychological limits, feeling like she "abused herself" in the process of creating such an intense performance. Despite the personal struggle, Pugh maintains immense pride in her work and the final result of her commitment. Her reflection demonstrates the profound dedication actors can have to their craft, even when it comes at a significant personal emotional expense.

Los Angeles, Jan 7

Hollywood star Florence Pugh, who received praise for her work in the Ari Aster directorial ‘Midsommar’, has shared that she is not likely to do a role like ‘Midsommar’.

Furnishing the reason behind the same, the actress said that she feels like she abused herself while playing the film’s protagonist Dani, a grief-stricken American woman who has a psychological breakdown when she joins her toxic boyfriend on a trip to a Swedish midsummer festival, reports ‘Variety’.

The actress made the revelation during a recent interview on the ‘Reign with Josh Smith’ podcast. She said she’s “learned how to” protect herself as an actor over the years, and part of that is knowing when you just can’t do a role again.

“There have been some roles where I’ve given too much and I’ve been broken for a long while afterwards”, the actress said. “Like when I did ‘Midsommar’, I definitely felt like I abused myself in the places that I got myself to go”.

“The nature of figuring these things out is you need to go, ‘Alright, well, I can’t do that again because that was too much’”, she continued. “But then I look at that performance and I’m really proud of what I did, and I’m proud of what came out of me. I don’t regret it. But, yeah, there’s definitely things that you have to respect about yourself”.

As per ‘Variety’, any abuse that Pugh suffered during the making of ‘Midsommar’ was strictly self-inflicted.

She has nothing but praise for director Ari Aster and told The New York Times last year that he’s “peculiar in a mad genius kind of a way” and “a stand-up comedian at heart”.

She added, “Once you laugh at one thing, he will try and make you laugh at all the other things. He’ll keep going and everybody will be crying in fits of laughter”.

— IANS

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked