Before she was Disneyâs iconic Mary Poppins or the Bakerâs Wife in âInto the Woods,â Emily Blunt was just a little girl struggling with a stutter. Even today the actor still considers herself a stutterer. âCertain words will get stuck, the phone is a bit of a nightmare,â Blunt said on stage at Varietyâs Power of Women Presented by Lifetime event.
Blunt was there to accept the Wells Fargoâs Power of Women Alumni Award for dedicating her time and energy to help children overcome stuttering through educational resources at the American Institute for Stuttering.
Presented by Krista Phillips, the Head of Consumer Cards & Marketing at Wells Fargo, Phillips applauded Bluntâs continuous work with the institute, âShe works with children and parents affected by stuttering â a cause that is deeply personal to her,â she said. âHer support has enabled the Institute to expand its reach, offer more resources, and conduct groundbreaking research to better understand and address stuttering, providing hope and assistance to individuals who face this challenge daily.â
Blunt started her speech by recalling her 2018 Variety Power of Women honor and acknowledging all the âamazing women with their tits out.â
âGet your tits out, itâs amazing!â Blunt said on stage with a laugh.
She continued, âI am grateful to shed light on [stuttering] because it is a disability that lives very often in the shadows alongside its friends: fear and shame and humiliation.â
Pointing out that stuttering affect about 3 million people in American and around 80 million people across the globe, the actress stressed that people should stop characterizing a stutter as a nervous condition or a psychological issue. âThis is wrong,â Blunt said. âIt is neurological, itâs biological, itâs often hereditary and itâs not your fault.â
Blunt shared how she still occasionally stutters over certain words or when speaking on the phone. âEnvironments challenge me if Iâm scared, or if Iâm under pressure to persuade or convince, like, donât ever ask me to pitch you anything ever.â
Blunt revealed the complexities of growing up with a stutter. It never really leaves you, she said, âA stutter is like an imposter living in your body. Who doesnât pay rent. And completely and utterly misrepresents who you are as a person.â
The actress continued discussing her 17 years working with the Institute, calling the group family and celebrating the hundreds of children they have helped.
She then ended her speech with a frank conversation on how to be a champion for those working through speech therapy. âNext time you meet someone who stutters, know that every word they say takes effort and courage. Look them in the eye, be patient. Donât tell them to slow down, or breathe, or spit it out. Itâs a neurological thing, itâs sort of a motor pathway thing. Donât finish their sentences. They know what they want to say, they have so much to share. Just be patient.â
