The British actor, who has a genetic condition that causes tumours to grow along the nerves, is in a movie about an actor with the same illness who undergoes a medical trial that successfully removes them.
Actor Adam Pearson, who has a disfiguring facial condition, wants to help others learn about such differences as he plays a man with the same illness in his latest film.
The British star, 39, has neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1), a genetic condition that causes tumours, which are most often benign, to grow along your nerves.
Pearson, who made his acting debut in the 2013 film Under the Skin, said: “There are two ways to lose your anonymity in a society – to either become famous or have a disfigurement so I’ve kind of shot myself in both feet a little bit on that one.”
But he wants to encourage acceptance of his condition and said anyone choosing to take a “vow of almost noble silence” to avoid a “politically correct minefield” can do more harm than good.
“Kindness goes a long way”, he added.
He stars alongside Marvel’s Sebastian Stan in the drama A Different Man, about an actor with NF1 who undergoes a medical trial that successfully removes the tumours on his face.
Made by A24, the film explores social norms and self-confidence and hopes to create a platform for open and honest conversations.
Co-star Stan, who plays Edward, the film’s lead, uses prosthetics to mimic the symptoms of neurofibromatosis and went out in public in character to see how people would respond.
He said there was “nothing more self-conscious or isolating than that experience.
“The recognition part is a similar concept of you being a public property just like it is you being different or being disabled or disfigured but it was 20 times the amount.
“You feel the energy shift and you feel the discomfort. And it informed everything for me from that point on”.
The actor, who plays Donald Trump in the upcoming film The Apprentice, said it made him reflect on how focused society is on physical appearance.
He said we often make huge efforts to improve our lives, hoping “something is going to change on the inside.