Alicia Silverstone

Alicia Silverstone ‘wasn’t happy’ working in Hollywood, chose to step away

BDC News

Los Angeles, Feb 23  Alicia Silverstone had given up on acting because she ‘wasn’t happy’ in Hollywood. The 46-year-old star launched her career by appearing in

Alicia Silverstone
Alicia Silverstone

1993 movie ‘The Crush’ as well as part of videos for the rock band Aerosmith and later became a household name after starring as Cher in the hit teen movie ‘Clueless’ in 1995.

But, the actress has admitted she wasn’t ‘comfortable’ with fame, reports Female First UK.

She told The Hollywood Reporter: ‘When ‘Clueless’ came out, it really shifted. I had been the girl from ‘Crush’, then I was the Aerosmith chick, and then, after that, I was Cher. It was very complicated and I don’t think I knew how to manage it: I didn’t have the foundation, or the good tools to deal with it, I wasn’t prepared for it in any way, shape, or form. I really had no idea what was happening, and it didn’t feel comfortable.’

Alicia went on to land a big-money movie deal and appear in the widely-panned comic book blockbuster ‘Batman and Robin’ but the actress says she wasn’t enjoying herself and decided to step away from Hollywood by the end of the 1990s.

She explained, quoted by Female First UK: ‘I wasn’t happy and what I did was really extract myself a bit from my acting career and went more into my activism.’

‘I went to Africa to help the elephants, I went to Peru to try to help the rainforest. I found my passion for writing books on healing and health. The Kind Diet books came a bit later but that was the start of the journey there.’

Female First UK further states that Alicia didn’t give up acting completely and took a number of smaller parts over the years, but has since been throwing herself back into bigger roles again after falling back in love with acting while appearing in David Mamet’s play ‘Boston Marriage’ in 2007.

She said: ‘It was there, when I was on stage, doing a David Mamet play, being directed by David Mamet, it reminded me how much I really, really love acting. And I was sad I’d let go of so much of it. There were so many amazing opportunities that I said no to because I didn’t feel able. But after that play, I thought, ‘Geez, I’d really love to do that again’.’

 

--IANS
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(This story has not been edited by BDC staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed from IANS.)
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