Mara Wilson became a child star when she was only nine years old with a legendary role Hollywood with the film “Matilda”. Until then, he had already participated in some commercials and in a couple of films, which were his stepping stones into the industry.

Watch out, Tronchatoro is back! Netflix unveils trailer for ‘Matilda: The Musical’

Her journey into the world of cinema began when, at the age of six, she took part in a casting and was chosen to play Natalie ‘Nattie’ Hillard in Robin Williams’ film “Mrs. Doubtfire” or “Dad Forever”, published in 1993.

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Then she had the opportunity to return to the small screen in the role of Susana Walker Miracle on 34th Street (Miracle on 34th Street), and later, in 1996, she became Matilda, a genius girl who develops psychokinetic abilities and uses them to deal with her crazy family and the evil principal Tronchator.

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During the filming of this film, his mother Suzie died of cancer. Now, almost 27 years after the premiere, the American spoke to The Guardian about how devastating this role was in her life, how she was sexualized when she was 12 years old and the inappropriate things that were said about her on the Internet.

Mara Wilson, protagonist of Matilda: “I was sexualized as a child”

On July 14, she will turn 36 years old, and after her last important role in the film “Thomas and the Magic Railroad” from 2000, she was absent from the cinema for 23 years.

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Mara Wilson and the pressure of Hollywood

After gaining fame, Mara Wilson felt under the pressure of Hollywood, despite the fact that in her short career, her parents always took care of her on the set, where, as she says, she felt safe, and she expressed this in her memoirs. “Goog girls don’t”.

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“I always felt safe on film sets. There were definitely some questionable things that happened sometimes, like adults telling dirty jokes or sexually harassing people in front of me.”

But the fact that fame came to her so young will reflect on her fans who always expected her to be “intelligent, beautiful, nice”, like her character Matilda, but it wasn’t always like that, especially when she was alive. losing her mother when she was a child. “They expected it to be Matilda and she’s not real,” he said.

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Mara Wilson admitted that she became a “nerdy and awkward” teenager who was annoyed by certain situations, such as when she looked up her name on the Internet and was unpleasantly surprised.

“I made the mistake of googling myself when I was 12 and I saw things I couldn’t stop seeing,” she said, referring to her face being edited over the bodies of other girls on porn sites.

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“I don’t think you can be a child star without some kind of permanent damage,” he said in the interview, also quoted by Mail Online.

Although Wilson did not become a Hollywood star who ended up drunk, drugged or partying as some or most do, she turned her anger on herself in a self-destructive way.

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She remembers telling herself “you’re a loser, you’re a failure, you’re ugly”, something that hit home easily as she began to think that she was no longer considered “pretty” in the industry, especially when in mid-puberty the director asked her to wear a sports bra to flatten her breasts during filming.

What happened to the actress who played ‘Tronchatoro’ after she starred in ‘Matilda’ in 1996.

“If you’re not beautiful, you’re not worth anything,” she thought, and that’s when her career began to slow down.

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In mid-puberty, she was diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and it was thought that she might have post-traumatic stress disorder.

After “Thomas and the Magic Railroad” was completed, Mara Wilson decided to focus on school instead of acting in movies. That’s why he decided to study performing arts before enrolling at New York University. In 2016, he came out as bisexual.

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She is currently trying to break through as a writer while occasionally acting, especially in audio books, and also hosting podcasts.

He currently has no plans to return to film or television, as he has no interest in changing his physical appearance if a director suggests it. “I don’t want anyone telling me, ‘You need to lose 30 pounds and get a nose job.'” (AND)