Mental health has been described as a "slow-growing epidemic" and the number of people dealing with it has increased by 10 per cent in the last 10 years.
The worst thing about it is that it doesn't discriminate- anyone can be affected by it.
Check out 51 of the biggest celebrities in showbiz talking about their experiences with mental health, depression or anxiety.
If you want to speak to someone, visit mind.org.uk for more information.
- Ryan ReynoldsRyan Reynolds opened up about the anxiety he experienced whilst filming Deadpool. "I never, ever slept. Or I was sleeping at a perfect right angle – just sitting straight, constantly working at the same time", he explained. "By the time we were in post [production], we’d been to Comic-Con, and people went crazy for it. The expectations were eating me alive." The 40-year-old credited his wife, Blake Lively, for helping him through it: "Blake helped me through that. I’m lucky to have her around just to keep me sane".
- Will YoungWhen Will Young pulled out of Strictly Come Dancing insiders said it was a result of his anxiety. He has always been honest about battling his demons. The singer said: "It's very isolating. There's a part of my brain that is telling me that you're about to die, you either shut down, freeze or you run. The only thing I can do is go to bed." He added: "There have been dreadful times where I've been suicidal and on the floor."
- Lena DunhamLena Dunham posted a message on her Instagram about using exercise to deal with her anxiety. She wrote: “Promised myself I would not let exercise be the first thing to go by the wayside when I got busy with Girls Season 5 and here is why: it has helped me with my anxiety in ways I’ve never dreamed possible. “To those struggling with anxiety, OCD, depression: I know it’s mad annoying when people tell you to exercise, and it took me about 16 medicated years to listen. I’m glad I did. It ain’t about the ass, it’s about the brain.”
- Demi LovatoThe singer has never shied away from opening up about her problems and is determined to de-stigmatise mental illness by sharing her story. Demi Lovato said: “I just think mental illness is something people need to learn more about.I want people to know it's okay to ask for help and it's okay to have a mental illness." Speaking at the National Council for Behavioral Health in Washington DC, she said: “I think it's important that people no longer look at mental illness as something taboo to talk about. It's something that's extremely common, one in five adults has a mental illness, so basically everyone is essentially connected to this problem and this epidemic," she explains. "The problem with mental illness is people don't look at it as a physical illness. When you think about it, the brain is actually the most complex organ in your body. We need to treat it like a physical illness and take it seriously."
- James ArthurJames Arthur might be the comeback kid but he has spoken about going through dark times in the past. The X Factor considered taking his life after being dropped from Simon Cowell's record label in 2013. He said: "If I was ever near a balcony, or in my car, I'd have an image of me jumping over or driving off the road. "But then I'd think, 'Don't do it, you've got sisters, you're the man of the family.' But there was many a time I thought of it."
- Kerry WashingtonAs Scandal's Olivia Pope, she is always solving problems and Kerry Washington knows the importance of having therapy to sort her own life too. “My brain and my heart are really important to me. I don’t know why I wouldn’t seek help to have those things be as healthy as my teeth. I go to the dentist. SO why wouldn’t I go to a shrink?”
- Wentworth MillerWentworth Miller, has spoken candidly about coming out and considering suicide.
The Prison Break actor said: "I would say what others have said: 'it gets better. One day, you'll find your tribe. You just have to trust that people are out there waiting to love you and celebrate you for who you are.
"In the meantime, the reality is you might have to be your own tribe. You might have to be your own best friend. That's not something they are going to teach you in school. So start the work of loving yourself." - Cara DelevingneShe is one of the most successful models in the world but Cara Delevingne used her power for good when she posted on Twitter about her battle with depression.
She Tweeted: "I suffer from depression and was a model during a particularly rough patch of self hatred. I am so lucky for the work I get to do but I used to work to try and escape and just ended up completely exhausting myself. I am focusing on filming and trying to learn not to pick apart my every flaw. I am really good at that.”
- Sarah SilvermanSarah Silverman explained: “People use ‘panic attack’ very casually out here in Los Angeles, but I don’t think most of them really know what it is. Every breath is laboured. You are dying. You are going to die. It’s terrifying. And then when the attack is over, the depression is still there.
"I wouldn’t wish depression on anyone. But if you ever experience it, or are experiencing it right now, just know that on the other side, the little joys in life will be that much sweeter. The tough times, the days when you’re just a ball on the floor-they’ll pass. You’re playing the long game and life is totally worth it.” - Justin BieberJustin Bieber spoke to NME about how fame had a negative effect on his mental health: “I’m struggling just to get through the days. I think a lot of people are
This life can rip you apart. [I get depressed] all the time. And I feel isolated. You’re in your hotel room and there are fans all around, paparazzi following you everywhere, and it gets intense. When you can’t go anywhere or do anything alone you get depressed. I would not wish this upon anyone.” - Amanda SeyfriedAmanda Seyfried talked to Glamour about receiving therapy for her anxiety: “I still do get terribly nervous, and that’s partly due to the fact I think too much and overanalyse things. I’ll start worrying about my parents or my dog, and I’ll picture him opening the window of my apartment and falling out, even though I can’t get that thing open myself.”
- Kristen Stewart“Between ages 15 and 20, it was really intense. I was constantly anxious. I was kind of a control freak. If I didn’t know how something was going to turn out, I would make myself ill, or just be locked up or inhibited in a way that was really debilitating," Kristen Stewart talks about not being able to let go.
- Colin FarrellColin Farrell spent six weeks in a rehabilitation centre to treat his depression and drug and alcohol addictions in 2005. The 40-year-old told Friday Night With Jonathan Ross: “Desperation will allow you to do incredible things in the name of survival…I had created an environment for myself, a way of living for myself which, on the outside, seemed incredibly gregarious and vivacious. “I don’ believe I have any chemical predisposition towards depression, but let’s just call it… I was suffering from a spiritual malady for years and I induldged it.”
- ZoellaZoella never shies away from discussing what it's like to deal with anxiety. When the vlogger posted a video about her panic attacks, it got over 3.5 million views.
Writing for Glamour , she said: “I go through phases where my anxiety isn't as bad and when it's pretty awful. When it's good, I'll be able to leave the house, go shopping, visit other countries for work, do meet and greets and generally live life like a 'normal person'. When it's bad, I can't even leave my bed or I'll start my day off by opening my eyes and having a panic attack.” - Zayn MalikThe One Direction star has been praised for his honesty over his "extreme anxiety" which has led to him having to cancel concerts.
Zayn Malik said: "I have been working over the last three months to overcome my extreme anxiety around major live solo performances.
"I don’t have it in me to feel secure in anything I do. I always strive towards something better.
“It’s why I sometimes come across the wrong way – a bit distant. I’m stressed out trying to control how I’m perceived.” - Nicole ScherzingerThe X Factor judge opened up about her battle of bulimia calling it “a horrible, paralysing disease”.
Nicole Scherzinger said:
“I had started losing my voice, I couldn’t sing at shows, and then I remember my manager finding me passed out on the floor in Malta or in the south of France. I thought, ‘I’m going to lose everything I love if I don’t love myself.’ … It’s sad to see how I wasted my life. I had such a great life on the outside, the [Pussycat] Dolls were on top of the world, but I was miserable on the inside. I’m never letting that happen again; you only get one life – I was 27 only once.” - Ruby RoseRuby Rose talked about her struggles with depression after a fan found an old Tweet she posted in 2013.
It said: “It is with great sadness that despite everything I’ve tried in a short time I was given I am losing my battle with depression.”
Ruby took to Instagram to explain the difficult period in her life: “I had hit a rock bottom."
After moving to America and a stint in rehab, the actress got her life back on track.
She added: "It just makes me wonder how many others are days, hours, seconds away from realising their worth, their potential? And once the dark cloud is lifted will be truly happy and free." - Winona RyderWinona Ryder explains how depression feels: “You can’t pay enough money to cure that feeling of being broken and confused. It’s not like every day’s been great ever since. You have good days and bad days, and depression’s something that, y’know, is always with you.”
- Zosia MametThe Girls star spoke to Glamour about how she had been dealing with an easting disorder since she was a child.
Zosia Mamet said: “I’m an addict in recovery. We need to treat eating disorders just as seriously as other addictions. I'm not fat; I've never been fat. But ever since then, there has been a monster in my brain that tells me
I am. During treatment,
I discovered that my disorder has never really been about weight
, or food - that's just the way the monster manifests itself. Really these diseases are about control: control of your life and of your body." - Adele“I have anxiety attacks, constant panicking on stage, my heart feels like it’s going to explode because I never feel like I’m going to deliver, ever," Adele reveals.
- BeyonceEven a megastar like Beyonce sometimes struggles to feel ok.
She said: “It was beginning to get fuzzy – I couldn’t even tell which day or which city I was at. I would sit there at ceremonies and they would give me an award and I was just thinking about the next performance. My mother was very persistent and she kept saying that I had to take care of my mental health.” - Catherine Zeta-JonesCatherine Zeta-Jones disappeared from the spotlight to deal with her bipolar disorder but decided to talk about it to help others in similar positions.
She said: “I never wanted to be as open about it as I was. I have a British stiff-upper-lip mentality. I’m not the kind of person who likes to shout out my personal issues from the rooftops but, with my bipolar becoming public, I hope fellow sufferers will know it is completely controllable. I hope I can help remove any stigma attached to it, and that those who don’t have it under control will seek help with all that is available to treat it. If I’ve helped anybody by discussing bipolar or depression, that’s great.” - Christina RicciFormer child star Christina Ricci
opened up about how her fame affected her recovery from anorexia.
“Somebody actually found out about it and outed [me] while I was recovering," she explained. "It was a horrifying thing to do to a 14-year-old trying to cope with a devastating illness. And, out of rage, I vowed that no one would ever be able to out me for a secret again. So I was going to be completely honest in the rest of my life. I don’t want to be hurt in that way again.” - Dakota JohnsonThe Fifty Shades of Grey actress admitted she struggles with anxiety going to auditions for parts.
Dakota Johnson
said: “Sometimes I panic to the point here I don’t know what I’m thinking or doing. I have a full anxiety attack.” - Ellen DeGeneresThe talkshow host has spoken about the anger and depression that she faced after she came out.
Ellen DeGeneres
told Mail On Sunday : “When I walked out of the studio after five years of working so hard, knowing I had been treated so disrespectfully for no other reason than I was gay, I just went into this deep, deep depression.
“It's so corny but it's true. You have no idea where the darkest times of your life might end, so you have to just keep going." - Ellie Goulding“It was the weirdest time of my life." revealed Ellie Goulding. "Sick, horrible things would go through my mind but I didn’t want to draw attention to myself. I was sceptical [about having cognitive behavioural therapy] at first because I’d never had therapy, but not being able to leave the house [because of panic attacks] was so debilitating. And this was when my career was really taking off… My surroundings would trigger a panic attack, so I couldn’t go to the studio unless I was lying down in the car with a pillow over my face. I used to beat myself up about it. There were a couple of times after I released Delirium when I was doing promo and thought, 'Oh god, it’s coming back, it’s coming back,' but it didn’t. I think my body has become quite good at controlling anxiety."
- Emma Stone“The first time I had a panic attack I was sitting in my friend’s house, and I thought the house was burning down. I called my mom and she brought me home, and for the next three years it just would not stop.
“I would ask my mom to tell me exactly how the day was going to be, then ask again 30 seconds later. I just needed to know that no one was going to die and nothing was going to change," Emma Stone tells the The Wall Street Journal. - Frankie BridgeThe Saturdays star bravely opened up to Glamour in 2012 about her eight-year long secret battle with depression.
Frankie Bridge revealed: “One night, I got upset because Wayne (Bridge, her husband) hadn't bought the right yoghurts; I managed to convince myself that he didn't know me at all. It set off this spiral of negative thinking - that if I disappeared, it wouldn't matter to anyone. In fact, it would make everybody's life easier. I felt that I was worthless, that I was ugly, that I didn't deserve anything.”
It lead To Frankie going to hospital to get treatment and helped her get it under control.
She added: “Nine times out of ten, my depression is under control. I get a bit emotional to think I felt so low about myself, that I shouldn't be around people I love, because I can't make them happy. I did lose myself, but I feel like me again now.” - Glenn CloseThe actress is so passionate about getting people talking about mental illness that she founded Bring Change 2 Mind in 2010 with her sister, Jessie.
Glenn Close
revealed to Mashable she was diagnosed with depression in 2008.
She said: “I never realised that maybe I could get a little help. We’re talking about her own experience with depression, an illness she was diagnosed with only eight years ago.
It was truly a surprise."
For years, the Hollywood legend thought she probably had Attention Deficit Disorder, which can cause hyperactivity, impulsiveness or problems with concentration.
“I felt this inertia that would come over me,” she says. “You think of something and it just seems too much, too hard. That’s how it manifested in me." - Halle BerryHalle Berry talked about her lowest point:
“I was sitting in my car, and I knew the gas was coming when I had an image of my mother finding me. She sacrificed so much for her children, and to end my life would be an incredibly selfish thing to do. My sense of worth was so low. I had to reprogram myself to see the good in me. Because someone didn’t love me didn’t mean I was unlovable. That’s what the break-up of my marriage reduced me to. It took away my self-esteem. It beat me down to the lowest of lows.” - Hayden PanettiereHayden Panettiere opened up about her postpartum depression on Live! With Kelly and Michael
She said: “It’s something a lot of women experience. When [you hear] about postpartum depression you think it’s ‘I feel negative feelings towards my child, I want to hurt my child. I’ve never, ever had those feelings. Some women do. But you don’t realise how broad of a spectrum you can really experience that on. It’s something that needs to be talked about. Women need to know that they’re not alone, and that it does heal."
She continued: “It’s something that’s completely uncontrollable. It’s really painful and it’s really scary and women need a lot of support. There’s a lot of misunderstanding. There’s a lot of people out there that think it’s not real, that it’s not true, that it’s something that’s made up in their minds, that ‘Oh, it’s hormones.’ They brush it off.” - J.K. RowlingJ.K. Rowling has never shied away from speaking out and raising awareness on depression.
The Harry Potter writer said: "What's to be ashamed of? I went through a really rough time, and I am quite proud that I got out of that," she told a student journalist in 2008.
She has also been a source of hope for many in difficult moments through the famous Dumbledore quote, "Happiness can be found even in the darkest times if one only remembers to turn on the light." - Kate MossShe's the most successful supermodel in the world but Kate Moss suffered from anxiety when she was starting out in the fashion world.
She said: "I had a nervous breakdown when I was 17 or 18, when I had to go and work with Marky Mark and Herb Ritts. It didn’t feel like me at all. I felt really bad about straddling this buff guy. I didn’t like it. I couldn’t get out of bed for two weeks. I thought I was going to die." - David BeckhamDavid Beckham attempted to de-stigmatize Obsessive Compulsive Disorder by speaking out about how he deals with his condition.
He said: “I've got this Obsessive Compulsive Disorder where I have to have everything in a straight line or everything has to be in pairs. I'll put my Pepsi cans in the fridge and if there's one too many then I'll put it in another cupboard somewhere.
The father of four added: "I’ll go into a hotel room. Before I can relax I have to move all the leaflets and all the books and put them in a drawer. Everything has to be perfect." - Oprah WinfreyThe chatshow host seems to have the world at her feet but Oprah Winfrey revealed in a chat withAccess Hollywood about her anxiety while filming The Butler.
She said: “I remember closing my eyes in between each page because looking at the page and the words at the same time was too much stimulaton for my brain.” - Pete WentzThe Fall Out Boy bassist has always been candid about his mental health struggles.
Pete Wentz, who was diagnosed with manic-depression said: "I think I went through when I was in my 20s… I went through a lot of highs and lows. For me… you're travelling on the road. Everything is available to you and you can get what you need to get, or not… People just want to keep the machine going. They don't so much care how healthy you are."
The father of two, who describes his children as the “ultimate happy pill” added: “ My highs, my happiness are really high and my lows are very low and I'm not able to regulate between the two. Through actual therapy and having kids it's way more under control and something I can see when I'm on the roller coaster and control it more." - Nadiya HussainThe 2015 Great British Bake Off winner explains how she copes with her anxiety disorder.
Speaking on Loose Women, Nadiya Hussain said: “When I was doing Bake Off it was quite stressful and I had a little elastic band across my hand. I would ping it and forget why I was worried, I would use that in Bake Off but in week five or six it pinged off." - Melanie CMel C
revealed falling pregnant with her daughter, Scarlett helped her recover from her eating disorder.
She said: "When I was in the Spice Girls, the stress of suddenly being thrust into the limelight led me into an unhealthy relationship with food and exercise. I became obsessed about what I ate and I cut lots of food groups, like carbs and protein, out of my diet. I survived on fruit and vegetables and little else … I had to be healthy and from the moment I knew I was pregnant, I wanted to give Scarlet the nutrition she needed to grow fit, strong and healthy.” - Miley CyrusThe former Disney star prides herself on her honesty.
Miley Cyrus said: “I went through a time where I was really depressed. I locked myself in my room and my dad had to break my door down. My fans know that I’ve struggled with depression, and that helped them get over theirs. That gives me a big purpose – a reason to wake up in the morning that’s bigger than to put my f**king feathers and my little outfit.” - Lucy SpragganLucy Spraggan
, who was a contestant alongside Rylan Clark and James Arthur on 2012 X Factor, has revealed her witty songs are inspired by her personal battle with mental health issues.
The 25-year-old singer has struggled with depression, anxiety and paranoia and she even contemplated killing herself.
She said: “My anxiety got quite bad and it got to a point where when people stopped me to say hello, which I usually always loved, I couldn't keep up a façade. I had to find a person I felt comfortable telling so I spoke to a therapist.” - Leonardo DiCaprioLeonardo DiCaprio talks about dealing with OCD at work.
He said: "I remember my makeup artist and assistant walking me to the set [of 'The Aviator'] and going, ‘Oh God, we’re going to need 10 minutes to get him there because he has to walk back and step on that thing, touch the door and walk in and out again." - Lady GagaLady Gaga reveals: “I was angry, cynical and had this deep sadness like an anchor dragging everywhere I go. I just didn’t feel like fighting anymore. I didn’t feel like standing up for myself one more time – to one more person who lied to me. I really felt like I was dying – my light completely out. I said to myself, ‘Whatever is left in there, even just one light molecule, you will find it and make it multiply. You have to for you. You have to for your music. You have to for your fans and your family.’”
- Taylor Swift“And it can feel, at times, if you let your anxiety get the better of you, like everybody’s waiting for you to really mess up - and then you’ll be done," Taylor Swift speaks out about her struggles.
- Carrie FisherThe Star Wars actress has suffered from bipolar disorder for years and is still treated for it today.
Carrie Fisher said: “Sometimes you didn’t want to be that person. You didn’t want to hold the dinner party hostage. And I didn’t have a choice. I’d keep people on the phone for eight hours. When my mania is going strong, it’s a sort of clear path. You know, I’m flying high up onto the mountain, but it’s starts too fast. I stop being able to connect. My sentences don’t make sense. I’m not tracking anymore and I can’t sleep and I’m not reliable.” - Jennifer LawrenceJennifer Lawrence spoke out about her anxiety as a child: “When my mother told me about my childhood, she always told me that there was a light in me, a spark that inspired me constantly. When I started school, the light went out. It was never known what it was, a kind of social anxiety.”
- Emma ThompsonEmma Thompson opened up about her battle with depression in 2010 on Radio 4’s Desert Island Discs .The Oscar-winning actress admitted the condition had crippled her most of her life. She first suffered while playing the lead role in a West End revival of the musical, Me and My Girl in the 1980s.
She said: "I think my first bout of that was when I was doing Me and My Girl, funnily enough.
"I really didn't change my clothes or answer the phone, but went into the theatre every night and was cheerful and sang the Lambeth Walk. That's what actors do. But I think that was my first bout with an actual clinical depression."
The 55-year-old admitted it was work that helped her get better and also meeting her husband, Greg Wise on set of Sense and Sensibility.
She said: "The only thing I could do was write. I used to crawl from the bedroom to the computer and just sit and write, and then I was alright, because I was not present.
"Sense and Sensibility really saved me from going under, I think, in a very nasty way." - Kate WinsletKate Winslet talked about the weight loss addiction she developed as a teenager, and has admitted to starving herself in order to win acting roles: “When I was 15, I was nearly 14 stone. I was uncomfortable and self-conscious. I knew I wanted to be an actress and was big. Over a year I sensibly got down to 10 stone. Then I became addicted to losing weight and went too far. I was never anorexic or bulimic.
"I went through a three-month experimental laxative time, which was absolutely awful. Luckily I was strong enough to be able to say to myself, ‘What are you doing? You are just really hungry.’ The whole weight thing drives me crazy. This stuff is so important to me because I have been there and know what a vicious cycle it is.” - Brooke ShieldsBrooke Shields spoke about her postpartum depression after the birth of her daughter in 2003.
She said at one point she “didn’t want to live anymore” but she sought treatment and managed to bring her disorder under control
“If I had been diagnosed with any other disease, I would have run to get help. I would have worn it like a badge. I didn’t at first—but finally I did fight. I survived.” - Drew BarrymoreThe actress rose to fame appearing in ET when she was just seven but by the time she was a teenager, she was already addicted to drugs and alcohol and attempted suicide cutting her wrists when she was just 13.
Speaking in 2015 to the Guardian,
Drew Barrymore said: “I really had a fear that I was going to die at 25. And half yes, because no matter how dark shit got, I always had a sense that there should be goodness. I never went all the way into darkness. There were so many things I could have done that would have pushed me over the edge and I just knew not to go there.” - Gwyneth Paltrow"When my son, Moses, came into the world in 2006, I expected to have another period of euphoria following his birth, much the way I had when my daughter was born two years earlier. Instead I was confronted with one of the darkest and most painfully debilitating chapters of my life." Gwyneth Paltrow opens up with dealing with postpartum depression
- Jon Hamm“Honestly? Antidepressants help! If you can change your brain chemistry enough to think: ‘I want to get up in the morning; I don’t want to sleep until four in the afternoon. I want to get up and go do my shit and go to work’. Reset the auto-meter, kick start the engine," Jon Hamm speaks frankly about getting help.
- KeshaKesha penned an open letter about her experiences in an eating disorder rehabilitation centre.
“I’ve always tried to be a crusader for loving yourself, but I’d been finding it harder and harder to do personally. I felt like part of my job was to be as skinny as possible, and to make that happen, I had been abusing my body. I just wasn’t giving it the energy it needed to keep me healthy and strong. My brain told me to just suck it up and press on, but in my heart I knew that something had to change. So I made the decision to practice what I preach. I put my career on hold and sought treatment. I had to learn to treat my body with respect.” - Louise PentlandYouTube star, Louise Pentland aka Sprinkle of Glitter,
explains how counselling helped cure her anxiety.
She said: “Over the past few years I've experienced horrible bouts of anxiety. When that moment hits, my whole body tenses up and my mind spirals, thinking the worst - that I'm not safe and can't get home. I start crying, my breathing is all over the place and, in extreme cases, I throw up.
“Everything came to a head last November, after my marriage ended. Life suddenly felt so different - and hard. I had a terrifying panic attack at home. Everything came to a head last November, after my marriage ended. Life suddenly felt so different - and hard. I had a terrifying panic attack at home.” - Olivia MunnThe X-Men: Apocalypse star suffers from social anxiety and trichotillomania, which is the obsessive compulsion to pull out your own hair.
Olivia Munn told New York Daily News: “I don’t bite my nails, but I rip out my eyelashes. It doesn’t hurt, but it’s really annoying. Every time I run out of the house, I have to stop and pick up a whole set of fake eyelashes.” - Adam LevineAdam Levine, frontman of Maroon 5 explained: “When I was first diagnosed with ADHD, it wasn’t a surprise because I had difficulty in high school focusing. And I think now, people notice my ADHD as an adult on a daily basis. When I can’t pay attention, I really can’t pay attention.”
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