I look up, and Daisy Ridley is standing and waving to me from across the room at the Soho House in West Hollywood.
Dressed in a grey sweater (Los Angeles has been cold and gloomy for this time of year), and with her signature short hair, she somehow has that particular mix of star quality and approachability – as if your best friend from next door is now an A-lister.
It’s this same quality that gives her the chameleon-like tendencies that many actors strive for, with her acting projects ranging from portrayals of a troubled housewife to a socially awkward office worker and a strong and stubborn Jedi. ‘It’s all make-believe,’ the 32-year-old says, laughing. ‘It’s about turning up and being very present and being very open and available, but also submitting to someone else’s vision. It’s about being open to what other people believe, even if you come up with ideas of what that is.’
In her most recent role, Daisy plays the real-life American athlete Gertrude ‘Trudy’ Ederle in Young Woman And The Sea, based on the story of the first woman who swam the English Channel. (Daisy executive-produced the film.) It’s also the 98th anniversary of that historic swim – a feat Daisy learned about intimately. ‘The first time I swam for the role, we were in a 20m pool, and I swam halfway, then started panicking. I was like, “I can’t do it. I actually can’t do it,”’ she says. ‘It was a classic lied-on-the-CV moment of, “What the f**k have I done?”’
Guided by Olympic medallist Siobhan-Marie O’Connor, Daisy trained for an hour and a half, three or four times a week, over the course of two and a half months, before flying to the set in Bulgaria, where she swam for an hour and a half at least five days a week for two weeks straight before filming began. She swam in the cold and harsh current, moving her body in and out of the water, breathing on either side to make sure she was in the right place – sometimes hearing when ‘cut’ was called, sometimes not, and always pushing and swimming and trying to align herself with the camera.
On the last day, filming in the Black Sea, Daisy was told to just swim as long as she could. She has no idea whether she swam for minutes or for much longer. ‘I remember thinking, “I can’t do this any more,”’ she says. Emerging from the water with the thought, ‘God, I hope that was okay,’ and turning to O’Connor, she saw the tears in her trainer’s eyes. Daisy had not just done it, but she’d done it well – both the cold and current be damned. ‘The build-up to it was worse than the thing. Once you’re [swimming], you’re like, “Oh, I’m fine.” And then after the fact, I was like, “How did I actually do that?”’ she says of the experience.
And yet, Daisy is no stranger to doing hard things. Diagnosed with endometriosis (in which tissue similar to the lining of the uterus grows outside of it, often causing severe pain) in her teens, and polycystic ovary syndrome in her twenties, she’s been candid about her health, on social media and in interviews. But now she’s dealing with another curveball: Graves’ disease, an autoimmune disorder that involves overactivity of the thyroid.
Back at our table, Daisy takes a drink of water, then looks at me. ‘It’s the first time I’ve shared that,’ she says, moving her hands along the glass. She was diagnosed in September 2023, after her GP encouraged her to see an endocrinologist following bouts of hot flashes and fatigue. (She doesn’t know if her three diagnoses
are related, but the symptoms for all can be similar.)
The star had started feeling terrible following the filming of Magpie, a psychological thriller in which she plays Anette, a wife and mother who’s dealing with a rocky relationship. ‘I thought, “Well, I’ve just played a really stressful role; presumably that’s why I feel poorly,”’ she says. Then, when she started to describe her symptoms to her endocrinologist – symptoms including a racing heart, weight loss, fatigue and hand tremors – the doctor mentioned that the feeling of Graves’ is often referred to as ‘tired but wired’. Only then did Daisy realise that she felt irritable. ‘It was funny, I was like, ‘Oh, I just thought I was annoyed at the world,’ but turns out everything is functioning so quickly, you can’t chill out.’
With the diagnosis, Daisy experienced some sadness, but also – if she’s being honest – irritation as well. As someone who takes good care of herself physically, it felt to her like a random blow. On the silver linings side of things, the disease led Daisy to a more routine pattern of daily medication and a more mindful diet. She’s been vegan for years but decided to go gluten-free following her diagnosis. ‘I am not super strict about it, but generally cutting down on gluten makes me feel better,’ she says, noting it is said to help with inflammation for those predisposed to it, as she is.
Daisy is still trying to find balance. Soon after she started implementing the lifestyle changes, she woke up and found herself listening to the birds and noticing the colour of the sky and how it was so blue. ‘I didn’t realise how bad I felt before. Then I looked back and thought, “How did I do that?”’ The diagnosis has also led Daisy to a renewed sense of body awareness and reminded her that not everything can be anticipated. ‘I’ve always been health conscious, and now I’m trying to be more wellbeing conscious,’ she says.
She’s working to pay attention to her body, to slow down and rest when she needs to. She’s also integrating infrared saunas, cryotherapy, massages and acupuncture into her routine, along with her beloved bath time. She’s into crystals, too, carrying rose quartz – said to promote emotional balance, self-love and peace – everywhere she goes. ‘I do a fair amount of the holistic stuff, but I also understand that it is a privilege to be able to do those things.’
Daisy is, like many of us, learning to continuously listen to her body, a thing that she knows many women are not inclined to do. ‘We all read the stats about women being undiagnosed or underdiagnosed and sort of coming to terms with saying “I really, actually don’t feel good” and not going, “I’m fine, I’m fine, I’m fine, I’m fine.” It’s just normalised to not feel good.’
At that point, we sit in a moment of quiet, and I let the sincerity and severity of that statement sink in. If you look at the list of health issues she’s dealt with, Daisy has every right to be bitter or overwhelmed. But she’s thinking about those who have it worse. ‘In the grand scheme of things, it’s much less severe than what a lot of people go through,’ she says. ‘Even if you can deal with it, you shouldn’t have to. If there’s a problem, you shouldn’t have to just [suffer through it].’
In coming to terms with her new reality, Daisy’s exercise regimen has shifted as well. She’s worked out consistently since she was 20, but she’s been active all her life; her mum put her and her two sisters in gymnastics as kids just to keep everyone busy and moving. Having attended a performing arts school, she also danced and sang. Today, her routine includes working out with personal trainer Matt Bevan, who also trains the likes of Lily James, Sienna Miller and Jenna Coleman.
‘He’s just so good. He understands bodies; he understands fatigue,’ says Daisy, who doesn’t really do high-intensity cardio or running or things that ‘just don’t suit’ her body, health issues and goals. ‘I do lots of stuff that is reactive and functional,’ she says, including mobility exercises, some lifting and general calisthenics and body-weight movements. Moves that keep her going include lateral lunges, split squats, Bulgarian squats and hip thrusts. Bevan also integrates coordination drills, so her muscles work together as a unit. To do so, they incorporate medicine ball throws and plyometric jumps and hops.
Working in tandem with Bevan, Daisy integrates specialised trainings for roles that call for it – like swimming with O’Connor or doing kick-boxing for another high-action role. For Jedi training, she relied on a lot of arm workouts. (Wielding a lightsaber is no joke.) ‘Generally, my training stays pretty consistent. And then we tailor stuff to what I’m doing,’ she says. ‘It’s just finding the balance, and me understanding now where my tolerance really ends.’
And yes, her tolerance does end. After doing her press tour for Young Woman And The Sea, she went straight into pick-ups (re-filming small scenes or moments for a film). ‘I was just shattered, so I took a few days off training and am now on a “deload” week,’ she says, referring to taking a break or lowering the intensity of your workouts. It’s been an adjustment; for Daisy, working out is a mental escape, too. ‘It’s an hour just for me, and it’s my time to do what I need to do to make myself feel good,’ she says.
The other thing Daisy likes to do for her mental health? Reading. A voracious reader, she credits her love for it as a major reason that she’s an actor today. (Two of her recent favourites include Meg Mason’s Sorrow And Bliss and Roxy Dunn’s As Young As This.) Getting immersed in a script is one of her favourite parts of the job. ‘I get to the point where, if I’m reading, I can’t hear other people,’ she says. ‘Reading is my meditation.’
It’s hard not to see the parallel between tuning in to the words on the page and how she’s now tuning in to her own needs – whether she’s managing Graves’ disease, figuring out what works for her or finding peace in new routines. Her hope is that others going through health struggles can do the same and realise there’s calm and acceptance on the other side – you just might have to swim for it.
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