Lena Dunham Claims Adam Driver Was Verbally Aggressive and Threw Chair on Girls Set
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Lena Dunham Claims Adam Driver Was Verbally Aggressive and Threw Chair on Girls Set

2026-04-14T13:51:00Z

In her new memoir "Famesick," Lena Dunham reflects on her hit show "Girls" and the complex relationship she had with co-star Adam Driver.

Lena Dunham has opened up about a tense behind-the-scenes dynamic with co-star Adam Driver during the production of her acclaimed HBO series Girls, revealing in her new memoir that the actor was at times verbally aggressive and once threw a chair on set.

In her book Famesick, Dunham reflects candidly on her years creating and starring in Girls, which ran from 2012 to 2017. While she credits the show as a defining chapter of her life, she does not shy away from describing difficult interpersonal moments that unfolded during its making.

Dunham describes Driver, who played the brooding love interest Adam Sackler opposite her character Hannah Horvath, as someone whose intensity on screen sometimes spilled into real-life confrontations. She characterizes his behavior at times as verbally aggressive, and recounts an incident in which he reportedly threw a chair.

The memoir appears to frame these revelations not as an outright condemnation of Driver, but as part of a broader and complicated portrait of what it meant to produce and star in a groundbreaking yet turbulent television series. Dunham has been known for her unflinching honesty in her writing, and Famesick continues that tradition.

Driver, who has since become one of Hollywood's most celebrated actors with roles in Star Wars, Marriage Story, and House of Gucci, has not publicly responded to the claims made in Dunham's memoir.

Famesick is Dunham's latest foray into personal narrative nonfiction, following her 2014 memoir Not That Kind of Girl. The new book is expected to spark significant conversation given its candid accounts of fame, creative collaboration, and the personal costs of life in the spotlight.

The revelations add a new dimension to the legacy of Girls, a show that was both beloved and controversial during its run. As readers and fans digest Dunham's account, the book is already generating widespread attention across entertainment media.