Jessie Buckley says acting helped her overcome eating disorder as a teenager
Oscar-frontrunner Jessie Buckley has said acting is "like water to me" as she spoke about how passion for her craft helped her overcome an eating disorder and depression as a teenager.
As well as choosing her tracks she also spoke about her time on BBC talent show I'd Do Anything and praised her "extraordinary" mother.
"I didn't know how to be alive the way I wanted to be, and it was difficult," she said.
"But I do not for a second regret it, and I think I've been able to transform it and recognise our vulnerabilities as humans in the world.
"There were moments where I was like, 'if I don't get better here, this music, this being part of theatre - I'm not going to be able to do this any more, and I probably won't survive'," she said.
"And that was the thing that turned it in my head.
I was like, 'I don't want to sacrifice that, this is bigger than that', and won. " Buckley has already collected a Golden Globe and a Bafta, among other awards, for her performance in Hamnet - based on Maggie O'Farrell's novel of the same name. She told Laverne that the first time she performed on stage: "It was like drinking water, you know? I just think, the more I did it, the more I realised, this is essential to me. " Buckley rose to fame on I'd Do Anything, a talent show seeking an actress to play Nancy in a West End production of Oliver!. "I don't like that part of it," she told Laverne. "I think that was a young woman who's trying to discover her body and herself, like we all do. And I wish that hadn't happened.
"And I just wasn't, I never will be
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