Marie Osmond Recalls Being Body Shamed, Developing Body Dysmorphia on Donny & Marie Set

Marie Osmond attends AOL Build Speaker Series to discuss "Music is Medicine" at AOL Studios In New York on April 15, 2016 in New York City.
Marie Osmond attends AOL Build Speaker Series to discuss "Music is Medicine" at AOL Studios In New York on April 15, 2016 in New York City.

Laura Cavanaugh/Getty

Marie Osmond is reflecting on the harsh moment she was body shamed as a teenager.

In a recent interview with PageSix, the actress and singer, 63, opened up about the scrutiny she faced from a producer while filming her talk show Donny & Marie, which ran from 1976 to 1979.

"It was on that lot that I was taken out to the back by some head of the studio — and I'm like 5′ 5" and about 103 lbs. — and he basically said, 'You're an embarrassment to your family. You're fat,'" Osmond told the outlet.

She also claimed that a producer told her that "250 people were going to lose their jobs because you can't keep food out of your fat face."

The comments resulted in Osmond picking up extreme diet regimens that "got down to like 92 lbs." However, she was fortunately able to stop the unhealthy habits, recalling the turning point when she realized she was developing body dysmorphia.

"I was in the dressing room, bending over putting on my pantyhose, and there was a girl in there changing who was just an emaciated skeleton with skin on her," she continued. "And I just thought, 'Oh my gosh, that's so sick,' and I stood up and realized that girl was me. And it was just one of those big 'AHA' [moments], that 'Oh, body dysmorphia is a real thing.'"

Noting the struggles that come with being a child star, Osmond admitted to the outlet that she often prioritized her career and other people rather than her own needs. But she credited her parents for helping her regain her confidence following those "tough years."

RELATED: Marie Osmond Remembers Being Body-Shamed as a Teenager: 'I Would Literally Starve Myself'

Marie Osmond
Marie Osmond

Michael Ochs Archives/Getty

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Osmond previously discussed her difficulty managing her weight in 2019 during an interview with Fox News.

"I was taking care of my mother and I had put the weight on," she recalled. "You eat when you're tired. You eat inconsistently. And then you try to diet. But you're also trying to raise a family."

"I was the provider for my family, so I had to work," she continued. "Eating was my way of coping with life. And you justify it, like 'My bones are getting bigger' or 'I'm just going to be my mother.'"

Osmond went on to detail some of her family's medical history. "Women in my family don't live much past 60," she said at the time. "They put weight around their stomach. They also suffer from strokes and heart attacks. That's what took my mother's life. And I'm the only daughter."

As the only daughter in her family of nine, Osmond's mother left an emotional message before her death.

"I have eight brothers. The last thing she said to me was 'Do not do to your body what I did to mine,'" she recalled. "Shortly after that, I was going through a divorce and I have eight children."

One of Osmond's sons also gave her a heartfelt awakening.

"I remember my son took me aside on behalf of the kids and told me, 'Mom, you're all we have. We can't lose you. I don't want to hurt your feelings, but you've got to lose weight,' she said. "That was the killer punch in the gut."