Inside Mental Health

Mental Health Isn’t a Movie: Olivia Nash on Changing Hollywood’s Narrative

Mar 19, 2026
Olivia Nash, Austin-based actor, writer, and director who drew on lived experience with depression and anxiety. She discusses portraying depression and anxiety without dramatic tropes. She explains translating personal experience into nuanced characters. She outlines on-set practices that prioritize people over productivity and how indie filmmaking allows more authentic mental health storytelling.
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INSIGHT

Mental Health As Part Of Character Life

  • Olivia Nash intentionally avoided dramatizing mental health and portrayed it as an ordinary part of life rather than a plot device.
  • She wanted characters to "live with mental health," showing functioning people who still struggle privately.
ANECDOTE

Dylan Based On Director's Personal Experience

  • Olivia wove her own experiences with depression and anxiety into Dylan, who appears optimistic but struggles privately at home.
  • Dylan chooses living-in-the-moment behaviors outwardly while hiding deep sadness, mirroring Nash's real-life nuance.
INSIGHT

Show Contrast Between Public Normalcy And Private Pain

  • To show hidden depression Nash contrasted public normalcy with private moments, using silent acting cues like eyes and solitary writing.
  • She emphasized showing sadness without explicit triggers or melodramatic reasons.
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