“You’re ugly”: Clara Luciani heartbreaking on 2 about her physique

“You’re ugly”: Clara Luciani heartbreaking on 2 about her physique
“You’re ugly”: Clara Luciani heartbreaking on France 2 about her physique

Since 2022, 2 has been offering The Papotin meetings. From Julien Doré to Gilles Lellouche via Jonathan Cohen or Camille Cottin, many celebrities have participated in this atypical interview magazine.

Saturday November 9, 2024, it will be Clara Luciani's turn to take part in the exercise. And according to the extract posted online on the X account (formerly Twitter) of Journal Papotin, the 32-year-old singer will confide like never before in front of the cameras.

His loneliness, his passion for Harry Potter and his physique will all be subjects addressed in the next show.

During his interview with the Papotins, the interpreter of To grenades will also have the opportunity to return to a painful element of his past: school bullying.

How did you feel when you were bullied at school?” will dare to ask her for a speaker. To which the pretty blonde should respond: “I felt injustice. It had become a bit of a thing at school to come see me and say: 'you're ugly'“Shattering confidences.

Clara Luciani opens her heart about her difficult childhood

This is not the first time that Clara Luciani has evoked these young years in this way. In an interview given to our colleagues at Parisian on February 3, 2023, she had already returned to his childhood marked by bullying from his classmates.

It started when I was 6 years old“, she explained before adding: “The other kids made fun of my size. I was already very tall. You can see it in my first grade class photo, I’m the same height as the teacher. At 11 years old, I was 1.76m tall. And then I was the first in class, and a slightly strange girl who liked to take refuge in books. And, when we have differences, it doesn't matter, unfortunately. I was taunted: 'The big asparagus', 'What the weather is like up there', 'You're ugly'“.

Some clever kids had fun putting thumbtacks or open ink cartridges on my chair“, she said. “It took such proportions that I went to school with a knot in my stomach and the desire to disappear. I was very alone. I felt rejected, worthless, ugly, and incapable of fitting into the mold. It lasted during college“. Particularly painful memories.

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