10 Years After Anne Hathaway Was The Victim Of Uncalled For Public Hate, People Have Accused Her Of Being “Rude” And A “Mean Girl”

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Anne Hathaway was just 18 years old when she got her big break as Mia Thermopolis in the 2001 movie The Princess Diaries.

  Evan Agostini / Getty Images
Evan Agostini / Getty Images

At the time, the young actor was warmly welcomed by the general public, and quickly grew a dedicated and adoring fanbase that supported her through other breakout roles in hit films like Brokeback Mountain and The Devil Wears Prada.

  Fox Pictures
Fox Pictures

But by the time that Anne won her first Academy Award in 2013 for her performance in Les Miserables, seemingly everybody had turned their backs on her.

  Universal Pictures
Universal Pictures

A decade later, it is clear that there isn’t really a reason for the so-called “HathaHate” that followed. The beginning of the end can probably be pinned to when she cohosted the 2011 Oscars with James Franco, with her enthusiasm rubbing critics up the wrong way.

  Kevin Winter / Getty Images
Kevin Winter / Getty Images

And it was that same earnest excitement that sparked backlash during awards season two years later, with Howard Stern saying after her Oscar win: “Let me sum up why people hate Anne Hathaway; first of all she gets a speechwriter to write her speech. She’s overly dramatic at these award shows. She’s always out of breath. She’s even acting when she’s winning an award.”

  Christopher Polk / NBCUniversal via Getty Images
Christopher Polk / NBCUniversal via Getty Images

This appeared to be the overriding consensus, with critic Richard Lawson agreeing: “She’s got this theater kid thing where she adopts the mood of every situation she’s in but wildly overcompensates every time. She always seems like she’s performing, and her favorite act is this overstated humility and graciousness.”

  David Livingston / Getty Images
David Livingston / Getty Images

While the hatred was obviously incredibly misguided and uncalled for, it was also relentless and prompted a yearlong hiatus from the star. Upon her return to the spotlight in 2014, she admitted to Huffington Post: “My impression is that people needed a break from me.”

  Vcg / VCG via Getty Images
Vcg / VCG via Getty Images

Later that same year, Anne told Harper’s Bazaar that she’d lost out on acting roles because of the public’s disdain for her.

  Marcel Thomas / FilmMagic
Marcel Thomas / FilmMagic

“I had directors say to me, ‘I think you’re great. You’re perfect for this role, but I don’t know how audiences will accept you because of all this stuff, this baggage,’” she said, adding that learning of the hate had felt like being “punched in the gut.”

  Alo Ceballos / GC Images
Alo Ceballos / GC Images

She went on to say that the experience of being the internet’s punching bag had made her “a way more compassionate and loving person” as she insisted that she doesn’t “feel sorry” for herself.

  Alo Ceballos / GC Images
Alo Ceballos / GC Images

Anne’s tactic to withdraw from the public eye and wait out the hate train appeared to work, and before long she was back on our screens as people admitted to being wrong about the star.

  Samir Hussein / WireImage
Samir Hussein / WireImage

In October, Anne reflected on the way that she was targeted during a speech at Elle’s Women In Hollywood event. She said: “10 years ago, I was given an opportunity to look at the language of hatred from a new perspective.”

  Frazer Harrison / Getty Images for ELLE
Frazer Harrison / Getty Images for ELLE

“This was a language I had employed with myself since I was seven,” she went on. “And when your self-inflicted pain is suddenly somehow amplified back at you at, say, the full volume of the internet... It’s a thing."

  Jon Kopaloff / WireImage,
Jon Kopaloff / WireImage,

“When what happened, happened, I realized I had no desire to have anything to do with this line of energy. On any level,” Anne added. "I would no longer create art from this place. I would no longer hold space for it, live in fear of it, nor speak its language for any reason. To anyone. Including myself."

  Amy Sussman / Getty Images for ELLE
Amy Sussman / Getty Images for ELLE

"You do not have the right to judge — and especially not hate — someone for existing. And if you do, you’re not where it’s at," she concluded.

  Tomohiro Ohsumi / Getty Images
Tomohiro Ohsumi / Getty Images

But recently, pop culture fans noticed that the tide was threatening to turn against Anne yet again. And ironically, a red carpet interview from the same Elle event is what triggered the latest discourse.

  Rodin Eckenroth / FilmMagic
Rodin Eckenroth / FilmMagic

In the interview, a reporter asked Anne if she had ever spoken about her movie The Devil Wears Prada with Anna Wintour, to which she said she had. The journalist then pressed: “And what has she shared?”

  Dimitrios Kambouris / Getty Images for Michael Kors
Dimitrios Kambouris / Getty Images for Michael Kors

“Why would I tell you?” Anne playfully laughed in response. The reporter replied: “Because I’m a fan and I need to know.”

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“I know, but you weren’t there,” Anne said.

  Dimitrios Kambouris / Getty Images for Michael Kors
Dimitrios Kambouris / Getty Images for Michael Kors

The interview clip resurfaced on TikTok earlier this month, and the person who posted it branded Anne “so rude” before reiterating in the caption: “why she being rude 😭”

The video has been viewed more than 6.8 million times and racked up over half a million likes as Anne was branded a “mean girl” by viewers in the comments.

  Taylor Hill / Getty Images
Taylor Hill / Getty Images

“It’s not what she said it’s how she said it. The reporter wasn’t being impolite so there was no reason for her to respond impolitely,” one person wrote. Another added: “she gives such mean girl vibes, I don't know why people say she's so nice.”

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“That was so unnecessary of her both answers lmao,” a third comment read. One more agreed: “omg since when was anne hathaway like that.”

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“celebrities acting flabbergasted when people ask about their lives as if they didn’t choose this life,” someone else wrote. Another said of Anne: “Her energy’s always been off to me.”

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“Anne Hathaway gives mean girl vibes,” one more agreed. Another user claimed: “I feel like this is a ‘never meet your idols’ moment.”

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But the video and a screengrab of the cruel comments received a starkly different reaction when posted to Twitter. Here, many argued that Anne was under unfair scrutiny and that other celebrities would have got away with the exact same response.

  Eric Gaillard / Reuters
Eric Gaillard / Reuters

“yall would eat this shjt up if it was aubrey plaza,” one person wrote. Someone else agreed: “i love them but if this was aubrey plaza or jennifer lawrence no one would bat an eye.”

i love them but if this was aubrey plaza or jennifer lawrence no one would bat an eye 😭😭

— spencer ☆ succ/barry spoliers (@flowerfiilm) May 7, 2023

“People are always more critical when the nice girl stops being nice for 2.5 seconds than they are when the mean girls and snobs act mean and snobby all day,” a third claimed.

People are always more critical when the nice girl stops being nice for 2.5 seconds than they are when the mean girls and snobs act mean and snobby all day

— Hapshoosh (@Hapshoosh1) May 7, 2023

“I honestly respect the way she stands up for herself and respects other peoples privacy. the public is not entitled to every detail of you life. period,” someone else tweeted.

i honestly respect the way she stands up for herself and respects other peoples privacy. the public is not entitled to every detail of you life. period.

— good morning sunday morning (@jeffinitelyyy) May 8, 2023

Others acknowledged the past HathaHate era and shared their refusal for it to happen again. One said: “We cannot start the anti-Anne Hathaway thing again. She did her time, and it wasn't deserved then, and it's certainly not deserved now.”

We cannot start the anti-Anne Hathaway thing again. She did her time, and it wasn't deserved then, and it's certainly not deserved now https://t.co/gEwMyASU1X

— Your good friend Chris Normal (@HeyThatsMyLeg) May 9, 2023

“y’all not finna bring back the anne hathaway hate train,” another agreed.

y’all not finna bring back the anne hathaway hate train https://t.co/7Ryjsyt49W

— shiv roy apologist (@TWPlTW) May 7, 2023

While one more seemingly summarized the entire situation as they claimed: “misogyny is VILE. y’all see successful women and feel threatened so you make up false narratives about her in comment sections…”

misogyny is VILE. y’all see successful women and feel threatened so you make up false narratives about her in comment sections… get help immediately https://t.co/CMk4qLZas2

— MARii ♡ ゚₊ · (@peachdollette) May 9, 2023

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