
Credit: The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon
There is a certain type of bravery that initially doesn’t seem like bravery. It appears to be a 28-year-old actress casually telling a reporter, while standing under the lights at the SXSW Film Festival in March 2026, that six months before filming her most recent film, she was, in her own words, “incredibly out of shape.” Not a spin. The majority of people in Hollywood would prefer to swallow this fact rather than speak it aloud.
Now that’s Lana Condor. And anyone who has followed her career knows that it was not an easy path to reach that level of honesty.
Lana Condor — Key Information
| Full name | Lana Therese Condor |
| Date of birth | May 11, 1997 |
| Birthplace | Cần Thơ, Vietnam (adopted, raised in the USA) |
| Age | 28 |
| Nationality | American |
| Profession | Actress, singer |
| Breakthrough role | Lara Jean Covey in To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before (2018) |
| Notable recent project | Pretty Lethal (2026, SXSW premiere) |
| Training background | Classically trained ballerina |
| Spouse | Anthony De La Torre (married) |
| Health history | Openly discussed body dysmorphia and eating disorder recovery |
| Reference | People.com — Official Profile Coverage |
In 2018, Condor made her public debut in the romantic comedy To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before on Netflix, which virtually instantly made her a Gen Z icon. On screen, she exuded charm, warmth, and genuine humor. Almost instantly, the internet began scrutinizing her body with the same compulsive attention to detail that befits any young woman who suddenly gains notoriety. Posts, threads, and TikToks were all present. People became aware of the changes. People conjectured. As if the performer’s weight gain or loss between seasons was the most important factor in a performance.
The majority of those online discussions failed to take into consideration what Condor had already managed to survive. She talked candidly—for the first time in public—about having battled body dysmorphia and an eating disorder in the past in a 2019 interview with Elle Canada. Before turning to acting, she had trained as a classical ballerina, and anyone with even a cursory understanding of the ballet world can appreciate the impact that such an environment can have on a young person’s relationship with their own reflection. Like many others before her, Condor experienced both the punishing body scrutiny and the breathtaking beauty of the art form.
“I know what it’s like to have an eating disorder and body dysmorphia,” she replied. That sentence carries a certain weight. She didn’t mention that she had gone through a phase or that she had briefly flirted with disordered thinking. She claimed to understand what it was like—yes, in the past tense, but with the kind of detail that comes from experience rather than a prepared talking point.
Following those initial admissions, a real-time public reckoning took place over the course of the following few years. Condor shared a picture of herself in a bikini on Instagram in September 2021 in order to face her own fear of doing so. This fear stemmed from the body dysmorphia she had spent years attempting to overcome. She wrote about the weight she had put on as she grew into adulthood, portraying it as a normal biological aspect of being a growing woman rather than a problem. It was the kind of post that might have been written off as a celebrity acting relatable, but there was something about the way it was phrased that made it seem earned. It was obvious that she had considered it. Perhaps she disagreed with herself before publishing.
The most significant change in her story may have occurred internally rather than physically during the years between that Instagram post and the SXSW press circuit. By the time she was promoting Vicky Jewson’s action thriller Pretty Lethal, which debuted to festival audiences in March 2026, Condor was discussing her body with a pragmatic ownership that felt genuinely different from the careful body-positivity language that has practically become required in celebrity profiles.
She talked about how she was out of shape in the months leading up to the show, how hard she worked to prepare—weight training, five days a week of ballet classes, and careful attention to her diet—and how proud she was of the outcome. “I went through a bit of a transformation, which I was very proud of,” she said to People. There’s no shame in the past. Don’t worry about the after. Just the satisfaction of finishing a task that needed to be done.
This is more important than it may appear. It is truly meaningful for a woman who once found it difficult to share a picture of herself in a swimsuit to describe physical difficulty without connecting it to self-worth. Her transformation for Pretty Lethal was no longer a confession about failing herself or a moral tale about discipline. She reportedly underwent a different transformation for a movie called Ballerina Overdrive, for which some reports claimed she lost about 28 pounds. It was an instruction. expert preparation. Something under her control, for reasons she knew.
Over the years, the general discourse surrounding Condor’s body has occasionally been less compassionate. Medication-related speculation has been discussed in Reddit threads. There have been comment sections that have viewed a young woman’s typical weight fluctuations as an issue that needs to be resolved or as a mystery. Almost anyone would be quietly exhausted by this level of scrutiny, but it’s worth noting that she has mostly handled it with a positive attitude.
Observing Condor’s approach to all of this gives the impression that she has reached a truly beneficial place—not so much a destination as a working philosophy. Bodies change. Certain things are necessary for roles. Life steps in. Weight is impacted by medications. Stress has an impact on weight. Growing up has an impact on weight. Unless you choose to make it so, none of it is a judgment on who you are, and none of it is anyone else’s concern.
She made it happen for Pretty Lethal, using her own framing and on her own terms. She was not in good shape. She put in a lot of training. She is pleased with her work. That’s the entire story, and perhaps the most intriguing aspect of Lana Condor’s current situation is that it can be explained so simply.
