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Lena Dunham in Memoir Talks About Adam Driver’s Temper and Being a “Lamb to the Slaughter” in HBO’s ‘Girls’

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CitrixNews Staff
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Lena Dunham in Memoir Talks About Adam Driver’s Temper and Being a “Lamb to the Slaughter” in HBO’s ‘Girls’
Dunham at the 2025 premiere of 'Too Much.' Lena Dunham at the 2025 premiere of 'Too Much.' Courtesy of Getty

Lena Dunham‘s memoir Famesick is out on Tuesday, and the writer-actress has been teasing some of the bombshell revelations in various interviews.

The creator of HBO’s Girls and Netflix’s Too Much goes into detail about becoming a TV superstar aged just 25 in the memoir, as well as traversing intense criticism around her body, her ideas, battling extensive health issues and meeting her now-husband Luis Felber after moving to London around five years ago.

In a piece with The Guardian released over the weekend, Dunham explains feeling as though she and her Girls co-stars — including Allison Williams, Jemima Kirke and Zosia Mamet — were “lambs to the slaughter,” upon the series’ 2012 release. Now 39, Dunham says she soon learned the pitfalls of reading what people have to say on social media. “I am one of the many examples they have of what [can happen] and there’s a sense of people learning how much vulnerability is useful and how much is not,” she says. “And I did not have any of that. I didn’t have any sense about even just simple things like posing, or style, or how to show your body, or how to show your face.”

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The Guardian describes “two central love stories in the book.” One is with Jack Antonoff, the indie artist and famed music producer, whose recent collaborators include Taylor Swift and Sabrina Carpenter, and who is now married to Margaret Qualley. The pair dated and lived together for five years until 2017. Dunham explores the decline of that relationship, such as his being late to the hospital after she had undergone a gruelling hysterectomy, following a battle with endometriosis.

The other relationship explored in Famesick is Dunham’s tumultuous team-up with Jenni Konner, her ex-producing partner who was assigned to Dunham by HBO as a mentor when she first started working on Girls. “My female relationships have always been very deep and very complicated, and very romantic,” Dunham tells The Guardian.

Among some of the more shocking extracts from Famesick is Dunham’s recounting of working with the now-Oscar-nominated Adam Driver, who Girls fans will know played Hannah Horvath’s on-off love interest, Adam Sackler, for all six seasons of the show.

He is described in the interview as “spectacularly rude to her,” per Dunham’s book, having once hurled a chair at the wall next to her, punched a hole in his trailer wall and screamed in her face. “At the time, I didn’t have the skill to … it never entered my mind to say, ‘I am your boss, you can’t speak to me this way,'” Dunham says. “And, at that point in my 20s, I still thought that’s what great male geniuses do: eviscerate you. Which is weird, because I was raised by a male genius who would never do that.”

“I have lots of amazing men in my life,” she continues. “Judd [Apatow] is a great hero of mine; Tim Bevan at Working Title is a huge part of my life and so is cinematographer Sam Levy. I just worked with Mark Ruffalo, the most thoughtful, sensitive, politically engaged, beautiful person. There’s plenty of them walking around. But there were years when I thought: Can’t I just make things that only have women in them?”

Among some of the lighter moments is Dunham’s being “in a great place for well over half a decade” now and her appreciation for how British women age. “They lean into their eccentricity as they get older. And it’s not just artistic people — it’s a woman who you see walking her dog on the road in the countryside in funny boots,” she says. “It’s very different in New York, where I feel like I grew up with women who had a lot more agita about ageing. It’s really cool to get older with [the British model] as an influence.”

The Hollywood Reporter has reached out to a rep for Driver.

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Originally reported by Hollywood Reporter