![]() She then received three months of inpatient care and began her road to recovery. Her mania – which she previously believed to be high-anxiety – was finally diagnosed. Following this incident four years ago, Viva was hospitalised. Her story feels made for the screen: a beautiful young model is arrested at London Stansted airport for jumping on the baggage drop-off desks and hitting the fire alarm. Showing the highs on camera was so freeing.” A lot of people can resonate with lows and try to give advice, but they don’t ‘get’ the high part. I’ve always felt more shame about my highs than my lows, as society finds those more difficult to understand. ![]() ![]() “There’s still a lot of secrecy around that. “What was quite nice was being able to show the highs of bipolar,” she explains. Yet for all the apparent hardships of being filmed at some of her lowest ebbs, Viva found the experience liberating. It is slicker, perhaps, but no less exposing. The second is the TV production Modelling, Mania And Me. The first was a personal project, crafted largely during lockdown a raw and intimate attempt by a young woman to understand herself through the experiences of others also living with the condition. It’s her second time tackling the topic on screen. Viva – a London-based model, mental health activist and now filmmaker – has just completed a documentary about her bipolar disorder. ![]()
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