Rachel Ziegler, like many young women coming in Hollywood, is not alien to negativity online, although the star says she does not let her reach her by reformulating her point of view away from the “victim's mentality”.
In a new cover story with Britain Mag Identification cardZegler – which is currently starring in London West End of Evita Jimmy Lloyd discussed, to the enormous reviews – how the spicy media and communities via the Internet examined and behaved in the eyes of the audience, whether it is explicit or just for throwing it on the project.
“It is interesting, it is sometimes worrying,” she said about the opinions that people share on social media.
In 2021, when she was photographed as a princess title in snow whitethe Western side story The actress (of Colombian origin and a Polish path) faced a hatred of right -wing social media users about her Latin background. It also faced a second wave of intense audit after the D23 exhibition of 2022 before filming, as it was considered the original “historian” of 1937 since the witch's “heroine” heroine – which has been modified since then. After the film failed commercially, it greatly carried the repercussions, despite the lukewarm reviews and creative issues behind the scenes.
“I think the victim's mentality is an option, and I do not choose that,” she said about how she is dealing with exposure online. “I also do not choose the distress in the face of it. I do not choose negativity in the face of it. I choose positivity, light and happiness. I sometimes believe, happiness is a complete choice, and every day I wake up and I think I am very lucky to live the life I live.”
Amid the promotion of the film, there was also a wave of excitement surrounding Ziegler's support for Palestine and Gaza amid what the leading human rights organizations committed by Israel, which were reported that they did not agree with the film producer Mark Platt.
“My sympathy has no limits, it is in fact what it is, and my support for one reason does not condemn anyone else. This has always been at the heart of who I am as a person. It is the way I grew up.”
When I was asked if she was concerned about the potential professional consequences, she replied, “It is clear that there are things at risk by being frank, but nothing deserves the life of the innocent. My heart does not contain a fence around it, and if that is my fall? There are worse things.”