Lena Dunham

The "Girls" creator seems incapable of being part of a collective movement without trying to be its face.
"There are few acts I could ever regret more in this life," the actress wrote in a heartfelt essay.
I'd developed a physical dependence and spent weeks in withdrawal. But I didn't know.
Steven Spielberg and J.J. Abrams hired the "Girls" creator for a movie about a Syrian mom shipwrecked escaping Egypt.
“My particular passion was Klonopin," the actress said during a talk with Dax Shepard.
In the new Lena Dunham comedy, the actress stars as a woman more insufferable than any "Girls" character.
"This isn’t a person who has a ton of power, but the small amount he has I feel he has used for ill," she told Andy Cohen.
"She made me feel safe and strong," the actress wrote.
"My body is mostly healed and every day I find a new bruise on my heart, but today I offer myself gratitude," said the "Girls" creator.