The Mail on Sunday

How Hollywood’s hottest property Sydney Sweeney, with her unashamed sexuality, is being heralded as proof that woke culture is dying

- From Peter Sheridan

THE first time Sydney Sweeney’s father saw her naked in a graphic sex scene on HBO’s provocativ­e television series Euphoria, he walked out of the room. Five years and many explicit sex scenes later, he is the proud father of one of Hollywood’s hottest rising stars, with a recent hit in rom-com Anyone But You, Spider-Man spin-off Madame Web and starring this month as a pregnant nun in horror movie Immaculate.

Still only 26, Sweeney produces her own films and is tipped to star in Marvel blockbuste­r SpiderWoma­n as well as being poised to remake Jane Fonda’s brazenly libidinous 1968 sci-fi action movie Barbarella.

But Sweeney has unexpected­ly become more than an actress.

The all-American blue-eyed blonde with corn-fed curves has become a cultural phenomenon, her unashamed sexuality embraced by America’s conservati­ve Right as proof that woke culture is dying, if not already dead.

Hailed by Republican­s as the poster girl of a long overdue cultural shift away from political correctnes­s, an incredulou­s headline in one of Canada’s biggest newspapers, the National Post, asked: ‘Are Sydney Sweeney’s breasts double-D harbingers of the death of woke?’

The question was flung like a hand grenade into the cultural debate after Sweeney appeared on America’s prestigiou­s comedy TV show Saturday Night

Live last month in sketches that focused on her body, parodying stereotype­s about her highly sexualised appearance.

According to National Post comment writer Amy Hamm: ‘We’ve spent years being chastised for desiring or admiring beauty – because beauty is rare and exclusiona­ry, and to exclude is to hate – or so we’ve been scolded to accept by today’s diversity, equity, and inclusion fanatics. We aren’t supposed to admire Sweeney’s beauty; but we’ve done it anyways. The times, they are a-changin’.’

ANTI-WOKE advocate Richard Hanania posted a video of Sweeney’s performanc­e on social media, proclaimin­g: ‘Wokeness is dead.’ Sweeney herself claims to be mystified at becoming the living embodiment of this political crusade, saying: ‘I don’t know how to explain it – I’m still trying to figure it out myself.’

Her body, and what it represents, is a hot topic of discussion from Washington DC’s corridors of power to Hollywood’s studio backlots. ‘People forget that I’m playing a character,’ she told The Hollywood Reporter. ‘They think: “Oh, she gets naked on screen, she’s a sex symbol.” And I can’t get past that.’

While embracing her body-positive apotheosis as an unapologet­ically sexual woman, Sweeney admits being wearied

by the continual focus on her appearance. ‘Sometimes I feel beat up by it,’ she told Hollywood bible Variety last year. ‘It’s hard to sit back and watch, and not be able to stand up for yourself.’

Yet Sweeney is only the latest Hollywood star on whom America’s conservati­ve Right has stamped their imprimatur, transformi­ng them all into political or style icons regardless of their personal leanings.

She follows in the stilettoed footsteps of Megan Fox, Jennifer Lawrence, Elizabeth Taylor and notably Raquel Welch, whose appearance in a fur bikini in 1966 hit One Million Years B.C. caricature­d the ideal conservati­ve woman: shapely, scantily dressed, subservien­t and barely speaking.

Sweeney was born far from Hollywood’s

bright lights in a small town in Washington state and raised in rural Idaho, where she rarely watched TV, excelled at school and, unlike her Euphoria character Cassie, never partied.

As a pre-teen she felt ‘ostracised’ for developing breasts at a younger age than her peers, an early taste of having other people’s sexual expectatio­ns projected onto her, as in Euphoria. ‘You have a character that goes through the scrutiny of being a sexualised person at school, then an audience that does the same thing,’ she told The Sun last year.

Her strict parents were religious Christians: the kind of folk who now paradoxica­lly criticise Euphoria for its egregious sexual displays, yet embrace Sweeney for killing woke culture.

A self-professed tomboy, she says: ‘The women in my family didn’t really wear make-up.’

Fans see the glammed-up starlet walking Hollywood red carpets, but she says: ‘In reality, Sydney Sweeney is a girl who is usually wearing no make-up, jeans and a T-shirt, and running around barefoot outside.’

She is the perfect blank canvas on which Americans can paint their cultural prejudices.

‘People see what they want to see,’ says Juliet Williams, professor of gender studies at the University of California, Los Angeles. ‘We really shouldn’t be surprised at the objectific­ation of celebritie­s as a screen for our projection­s, because that’s what they’re offered up to us for in their performanc­e of roles.

‘Sydney Sweeney’s Saturday Night Live skit was parodying the desensitis­ation of the male gaze and toxic masculinit­y, but unlike the British, Americans have an inability to see irony and parody.’

Sweeney began acting at 12. The following year her family moved to LA, supporting her Hollywood dreams. Money was tight. ‘We lived in one room,’ she recalls. ‘My mum and I shared a bed and my dad and little brother shared a sofa.’ Financial aid helped pay for her schooling and university. Yet Sweeney struggled to find acting roles and her parents divorced, filing for bankruptcy.

‘When I turned 18, I only had $800 to my name,’ she says. ‘My parents weren’t back together and there was nothing I could do to help.’

Her father, Steven, a hospitalit­y profession­al, moved to a remote ranch in Mexico without internet or mobile phone service. He was shocked by his daughter’s graphic sex scenes when he first watched Euphoria. ‘My dad and grandpa turned it off and walked out,’ Sweeney admits.

She remained in LA with her mother, Lisa, a former criminal defence lawyer who quit to care for Sydney and younger brother Trent. With her recent success, Sweeney paid off her mother’s mortgage. ‘My parents sacrificed so much to support my dream and they lost so much during it,’ she says. ‘I felt a responsibi­lity to show them that it was worth it.’ Sweeney found fame and Emmy nomination­s with White Lotus and Euphoria, but her family’s politics proved a distractio­n.

When Lisa celebrated her 60th birthday in 2022, critics focused on guests wearing what appeared to be Blue Lives Matter attire – a pro-police counterpoi­nt to the Black Lives Matter campaign – and Make America Great Againstyle­d red baseball caps reading ‘Make Sixty Great Again’.

It hardly mattered that Sweeney has no stated political leanings. It proved a dog whistle to the American Right, who are so quick to condemn outspoken liberal actors such as Jane Fonda and Barbra Streisand. Taylor Swift became a conservati­ve punchbag when she appeared poised to endorse Joe Biden to be re-elected president.

Life in the public glare overwhelme­d Sweeney, who began suffering panic attacks in 2022, thinking she was dying. ‘I was losing my s***,’ she told The Hollywood Reporter. She was forced to take a break to preserve her sanity. ‘I still can’t get my mind to shut up, and I don’t sleep.’

Her private life still invites intense scrutiny. She is engaged to her producing partner, Jonathan Davino, but in producing Anyone But You, Sweeney hired Glen Powell as her co-star, sparking rumours of an affair.

Yet America’s conservati­ves may be happy to learn that she shares some of their family values. ‘I always wanted to be a young mum,’ she admits. ‘I love acting... I love producing... but what’s the point if I’m not getting to share it with a family?’

Instead of family, Sweeney has been adopted by America’s Right as the unlikely antidote to rampaging political correctnes­s.

Signalling defeat, she says: ‘There’s not anything I can do.’

Oh, she gets naked onscreen ...she’s a sex symbol My dad and grandpa turned it off and walked out

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? POSTER GIRL: Sydney Sweeney and, right, in TV’s White Lotus
POSTER GIRL: Sydney Sweeney and, right, in TV’s White Lotus
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? SEXY ROLE: The Hollywood starlet in Euphoria, the controvers­ial show her father could not watch
SEXY ROLE: The Hollywood starlet in Euphoria, the controvers­ial show her father could not watch

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom