Florence Pugh pays homage to NHS nurses in emotional YungBlud music video

Staff
By Staff

Florence Pugh starred as a a nurse in Yungblud’s new music video and gained her wings while portraying the ‘dark side’ of healthcare, resulting in heaps of praise from NHS nurses for raising awareness

Yungblud and Florence Pugh photographed during shooting of Zombie music video
Florence Pugh appears as a nurse in newest YUNGBLUD music video, praising nurses as angels for their work(Image: Supplied)

YUNGBLUD released his latest music video to newest single ‘Zombie’ starring Hollywood actress Florence Pugh, who opened up about her emotional appearance in the video which pays homage to the efforts of the NHS.

The heart-wrenching video showcases the struggles of healthcare workers, with Florence portraying the overwhelming experience as a nurse consumed by grief, fatigue and the taxing need to remain positive.

The Little Women actress said the decision to work with YUNGBLUD (formally Dominic Harrison) was “the easiest yes” she’d given. She shared her process, saying: “I always try to align myself and my career with people that inspire me. He inspires me but in an even more important way because his soul, authenticity of who he is and what he’s making is so electric and full of love”.

Florence said the song “made [her] leap at the opportunity of collaborating” and that the shoot “was a dream”, where the singer supported her “as hard as [she] was supporting him. That’s true legendary leadership.”

READ MORE: Florence Pugh and Yungblud leave onlookers baffled as they pour pints at pub

Florence in scrubs in hospital ward, bent over in exhaustion and grief
The music video begins with nurse Florence bent over in grief, head in hand(Image: Youtube/YUNGBLUD)

The Marvel star has since taken to Instagram to share her love for the project, posting a thread of images that has since received a million likes. She captioned the post, writing: “I believe in everything YUNGBLUD stands for and am absolutely inspired by how he uses his art and his voice. Being part of his music video for ‘Zombie’ feels surreal to me”.

Florence then shared that the unexpected duo “have been trying to find something to work together on for a while” and all it took was a “suuuper casual” voice note to convince Pugh squeeze the project into her “insanely busy schedule”.

Florence Pugh gains her wings, in scrubs looking choked up
Pugh is gains her wings through her struggle as a NHS nurse surrounded by emotional cases (Image: Youtube/YUNGBLUD)

“I haven’t known him for long but I’m just so proud of this beautiful British talent,” Florence said before thanking the singer “for making this love letter to nurses all around”. The music video in question hitting 1.8 million views on YouTube in three days.

Zombie’s British Rock sound marries perfectly with the moody shots of Florence smiling amongst patients and being crushed by the emotional turmoil of nursing.

Cavell Charity’s Instagram shared nurses’ comments, one reading: “As an oncology nurse, this made me ugly sob in a ball in the corner. I have cried on my bathroom floor over a patient I lost and cried happy tears with a different patient as they ring the bell after finishing chemo in the same day.

“Nursing is one of the hardest yet most rewarding careers and this is such a beautiful portrayal of both the darkest and most joyful moments we go through. Thank you for this”.

Pugh breaking down in the bath
The video shows parallels of Pugh ‘in real life’(Image: Bing)
Pugh breaking down in the bath with angel wings
… And her with angel wings(Image: Bing)

Another wrote: “I’ve been a nurse for 23 years and no one ever talks about what goes on behind the professional mask. We are human too”.

“We all want someone or something to comfort us no matter how we are right now or who we become in the future. But it’s f***ing scary,” shared YUNGBLUD, who’s inspiration was originally his grandmother “going through serious injury and trauma, leading her to become a different person to who she was before”.

The video’s vulnerability conveys “the feeling of deterioration and ugliness; shutting out the world and the people we love out of the fear of becoming a burden or an embarrassment”.

Share This Article
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *