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Euphoria's Anna Van Patten Breaks Down Prosthetic Butt Process for BBL

Euphoria‘s Anna Van Patten got brutally honest about how "challenging" it was to wear a prosthetic butt after her character got surgical enhancements.

"That was a whole other experience. The prosthetic chapter of my Euphoria experience was wild," Van Patten, 27, told TV Insider on Wednesday, June 3. "I first had to get a butt scan and [then], because we shot that Silver Slipper shoot-out scene - it was a 10-day shoot - so I wore [a prosthetic butt] every day for 10 days."

Van Patten was up for the challenge.

"It would take maybe two hours to put on. At the end of day 10, it got a lot faster, but I had to stand up while getting it and wasn't really allowed to sit down all day," she recalled. "So they built me a leaning contraption that I would just kind of lean on while I wasn't [filming]."

The actress said showing off her character Kitty's new butt was "so funny in a way," adding, "So many people thought it was real. The girls in the club, they thought it was my real butt, so in person, it really did look so real … they drew on veins, drew on freckles, it was the whole process, but it was fascinating."

HBO

Van Patten is one of many stars who have opened up about using prosthetics. Earlier this year, David Harbour broke down his decision to wear a fake stomach for his show DTF St. Louis.

"It is used a bit for comedic effect, but also I wanted it to play as he uses food in a certain way, and to play as the reality of a guy who's not getting hits on these [dating] sites, and various things," Harbour, 51, told TV Insider in March. "We wanted to highlight some of the struggles that he has."

Harbour called the prosthetic "incredible," adding, "It's so funny. I keep thinking back to the prosthetic because … I don't know that I really needed it. I mean, it only added [a little bit]."

He continued: "I could have really just bulked up a little bit more, and I think I would have been fine, but it was nice to have, because there's something about having a mask that allows you a freedom."

Harbour admitted the process of putting on the false stomach was time-consuming.

"When it was just under my clothes, it was just a suit that I could zip up myself, and it'd be easy, take it off during lunch. But then, when we had to see it, even just the belly part, they had to put on the whole thing, and it took about an hour," he explained about getting a new prosthetic every day. "They're printed out of latex. It was about 30 pounds, so it's like a vest [that came down and] wrapped around the love handles a little bit."

Billy Bob Thornton, meanwhile, was seen nude while playing Tommy on Landman - but co-creator Christian Wallace clarified in January that it "wasn't an actual full-frontal" scene.

"We had an on-set intimacy coordinator, and the original prosthetic she brought in made everyone laugh. We were like, ‘No,'" he told The Hollywood Reporter.

After seeing the size of the original prosthetic, the crew opted for "a more humble alternative" for Thornton.

"It is surprising to me that people think that was actually Billy doing full-frontal nudity," Wallace added. "So I should say props to our intimacy coordinator for making it extremely realistic, and to the props team. They had a whole rig, as Billy called it: ‘Got my rig on.'"

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This story was originally published June 4, 2026 at 11:37 AM.

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