Brooke Shields wasn't "personally scathed" by playing a child prostitute on screen aged 11, because she choose not to be "victimised".

Brooke Shields didn't 'suffer' after playing prostituted child

Brooke Shields didn't 'suffer' after playing prostituted child

The 56-year-old actress landed her breakthrough lead role as Violet in 'Pretty Baby' in the hit big-screen flick in 1978, and she believes the sexualisation of young people isn't going away and she refuses to be made out to "be a victim".

In a candid interview with The Guardian newspaper, Brooke said: "I think it's been done since the dawn of time, and I think it's going to keep going on.

"There's something incredibly seductive about youth … I think it just has different forms and it's how you survive it, and whether you choose to be victimised by it. It's not in my nature to be a victim."

The 'After Sex' star, who lost her virginity when she was in her early twenties, insisted she grew up in a "sequestered" household, and though prostitution was rife in New York, it was all make-believe in her head as a result of her naivety.

Reiterating that she "didn't suffer" from the controversial role, she added: "It takes five minutes to see – on the old 42nd Street – what prostitution was.

"And also I was very sequestered from all of it in my real life.

"I was a virgin till I was 22, so it was all pretend in my mind. I was an actress. I didn't suffer privately about it.

"I guess you'd have to have an actress who was older, playing younger.

"I'm not quite sure what the rules are now [as if it's an HR issue, rather than a societal one.] But I also wasn't personally scathed by it."

Meanwhile, Brooke recently admitted fame made school hard.

She starred in 'The Blue Lagoon' two years after 'Pretty Baby', and her glitzy life as a teenager meant the other children took some time to warm up to her.

She recalled: "Ninth grade was tough, just like being a freshman in college was tough ... I went into a high school and I had just done 'Blue Lagoon' or something ... They were not shy of getting up at the lunch table when I sat down in unison to move en-masse ... Then they get bored with being difficult or caring.

"Then we started studying together, or if I did well on a test then I proved to them that I wasn't getting special treatment."

She revealed how the turning point came when her mum, Tina Shields, hosted a roller-skating party for "the whole class", which was a wake-up call for the other kids.

She explained: "The kids I thought I was so cool but what they saw while we were at this event was how much I had to work.

"So they're all dancing, and I'm having to take pictures and do soundbites.

"And then I got to dance with them, but I think they saw that I wasn't stuck up, I didn't think I was better than they were.

"And then I still had to take that math test on Monday. It balanced out!"


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