I wasn`t happy when I won my Oscar for Les Miserables - Anne Hathaway
At odds to her fellow Oscar winner Lawrence’s down-to-earth, super relatable, instantly-your-best-friend persona – this was the year she infamously tripped on her Dior dress while making her way up to the stage – Hathaway’s award season was often characterised with perceived gloating, being over the top or a characterisation as your typical run-of-the-mill drama schooled, All-American girl. A punch line from Amy Schumer’s 2015 hit film Trainwreck summarised it best when the comedian’s character teases her boyfriend (played by Bill Hader) when he wins a charity award: “You look like Anne Hathaway at an Oscars party”. Hathaway gracefully laughed off the joke while Schumer laid the blame for it firmly at director Judd Apatow’s door.
The Intern star has now reflected on her Oscar nod, explaining she was unhappy and uncomfortable during the ceremony and it was this fake happiness which led her to being ridiculed.
“I felt very uncomfortable,” she told The Guardian. “I kind of lost my mind doing that movie and it hadn’t come back yet. Then I had to stand up in front of people and feel something I don’t feel which is uncomplicated happiness. It’s an obvious thing, you win an Oscar and you’re supposed to be happy. I didn’t feel that way. I felt wrong that I was standing there in a gown that cost more than some people are going to see in their lifetime and winning an award for portraying pain that still felt very much a part of our collective experience as human beings.”
Anne Hathaway in `Les Misérables`
To play the role of Fantine – a woman forced into prostitution to pay for the upkeep of her daughter who later dies from illness – Hathaway famously took method acting to the next level by cutting off all her hair and embarking on a gruelling diet. At the time she called the diet “starvation” and refused to reveal the methods which led to her losing a rumoured 25lbs for fear of glamourising it, reaffirming she was portraying a dying woman.
“I tried to pretend that I was happy and I got called out on it, big time,” she continued. “That’s the truth and that’s what happened. It sucks. But what you learn from it is that you only feel like you can die from embarrassment, you don’t actually die.”
The general, rounded-up anti-Hathaway sentiment even led to the term the “Hathahaters”, and led the 33-year-old to take time away from the spotlight. She told the Huffington Post at the time she got the impression “people needed a break from me”.