Hollywood actor Penn Badgley, who gained the spotlight with his work in ‘Gossip Girl’ at age 20 and then ‘You’, said he had to ‘really grapple’ with accepting the downsides of fame to also enjoy the ‘extreme privileges’.
Stressing he doesn’t want people to feel sorry for him, he told ‘The Guardian’ newspaper: “Fame is extremely unnatural - just the way that people want to relate to you. It’s not a new idea that fame has all these nefarious dimensions to it. In order to even appreciate or utilise the privileges that come with it, one has to really grapple with the ways in which it’s completely disabled parts of you or your life or your relationship to others and society,” said the actor.
“The privileges and the sacrifices are both extreme and obscene and so you have to take them both. In order to be a decent person, a good father and a husband, a good friend and a responsible colleague, I’ve been grappling with all the ways in which this stuff is just not a good way for somebody to live,” he added.
The 39-year-old star ‘hated’ his body and ‘wanted a different one’ when he was growing up and he said becoming an actor brought further pressure, reported ‘femalefirst.co.uk’.
He said, “There was just a period where coming out of depression and isolation, I was jumping willfully into, but also being thrust into, this world where the more conventionally beautiful I seemed, the more successful I might be, the more value I might have. There’s no way to get past the superficiality of this work and if you recognise that, you can’t help but recognise the superficiality of our culture, because of the way it rewards this work.”
Of ‘Gossip Girl’ he added: “What was that show other than aesthetic? That was its thing, the way we all looked. I didn’t particularly love the superficial celebrity aspect of the way I was perceived.”
For some time, Badgley considered quitting acting as a result but ultimately found an ‘inner transformation’ through the Baha'i faith. He said: “That is what allowed me to persevere through the disillusionment, all the things I’d been grappling with and then come back to it all, but with hopefully some kind of inner transformation.”