Driving up to actress and cannabis entrepreneur Bella Thorne’s hilltop mansion in the picturesque backcountry canyons outside of Los Angeles, one could be forgiven for thinking that they were instead somewhere much more off-the-grid. This is a discrete area of Los Angeles County—close to the action, but far enough away that people who don’t want to be seen all the time can duck into the hills for some fresh air, literally and figuratively. Homes here are perched atop and in the pit of canyons, but rarely at street level, and driveways are always gated, with properties obscured by vegetation. The message is clear: All who live in this beautiful place prefer to do so in solitude. Come in peace, but only if you’re invited.

It just so happened that I had an invite, courtesy of Thorne and her team of handlers, though it still felt like I was trespassing in some sense. For me, maneuvering my Mini Cooper on twisting dirt roads while treading up and down hills in the uncharacteristic pounding rain of our drought-plagued state reminded me of driving in Humboldt County in Northern California’s Emerald Triangle, oddly enough.

Humboldt County is, of course, California’s famed cannabis growing country, and it’s another stunningly pretty place where people are welcomed with open arms, so long as they have an invite. Just like in the Triangle, there’s the promise of weed at the top of the hills on my horizon. Only this time, my car swerved between hulking live oak trees, not redwoods. And instead of meeting a grizzled farmer, I’d be interviewing a bonafide celebrity who’s finding her footing in the newly legal weed industry.

When I arrived at Thorne’s house—a gorgeous structure that towers over the canyons below and offers faint ocean views, as well as ample hillscapes and the distant glitter of the City of Angels—it became clear that not only is there weed in these here hills, hell, there’s damn near an empire.

For the unacquainted—which means you’re not among her 51 million combined followers on Instagram, TikTok, Facebook and Twitter—Thorne is an actor that began her career in that most reliable of superstar Hollywood child actor factories: Disney. There, she took her co-starring turn as CeCe Jones on the Mickey Mouse network’s hit series, Shake it Up, back in 2010 and pivoted to a massive career that includes appearing in some 30 movies since her debut. Thorne’s latest turn is Amazon Prime’s Time Is Up, co-starring her now fiancé, Benjamin Mascolo.

In addition to acting, Thorne is also a writer (she’s currently working on her second memoir), model, musician, content creator, activist and, most recently, a legal cannabis entrepreneur. With all of this at just 24, she’s also recently added a “Forbes 30 Under 30 2022: Hollywood & Entertainment” designation to her long list of credits and accolades.

Today, Thorne is putting elbow grease into her cannabis brand, Forbidden Flowers, which launched in partnership with Santa Barbara County-based Glass House Farms in late 2019. Thorne’s brand is known for its greenhouse-grown cannabis flower sold in jewel-toned glitter jars with evocative strain names such as Midnight Thorneberry and Topanga Sunrise, which are intended to give the smoker an idea of what they’ll feel after toking up. 

Some celebrities seem to start cannabis brands because it’s an obvious next step in their life plan for market domination. These days, and with a massive assist from any number of social media platforms, it’s easier than ever for celebrities to expand into consumer-packaged goods to further accentuate their personal brand. Cannabis is no different, with plenty of brands garnering labels slapped on by one famous person or another. The difference, in Thorne’s case, is that she’s a genuine cannabis enthusiast, dubbing herself an “indica girl.” She told me midway through a long, fascinating conversation that she actually started smoking weed at a young age for medical reasons. It helped calm her extreme social anxiety which at times even made her unable to keep down food.

“My body was kind of rejecting me at this time in my life,” Thorne says, reflecting on her teenage years. “And with anxiety not being really talked about…you know, that wasn’t something we ever talked about in my family. So, having none of these answers and feeling completely hopeless, weed helped me so much with that. It completely changed my life. I was coming to this point where doctors were putting me on pills, and I was so young.”

Bella Thorne on the cover of Cannabis Now magazine
Bella Thorne was photographed exclusively for Cannabis Now issue 44 by Peter Poby. Shot on location in Los Angeles.

Thorne says that prior to trying cannabis for the first time, her doctors prescribed her the ADHD medication Adderall, which she said “obviously didn’t help” with her anxiety-induced eating and digestion problems. It also interrupted her sleep and didn’t get better with time. She resorted to asking her older brother for something to help her sleep and he suggested she try dabbing cannabis concentrates. This unexpected detail completely surprised me because dabbing isn’t exactly the first stop new users take on the cannabis train, particularly teenagers.

“‘Oh, this is going to help her really sleep,’” Thorne said, laughing hard and recounting what her brother said at the time. “It was hardcore! At the time I was like, ‘I’m never smoking weed again after this.’ Cut to now!”

Thorne explained that it took her a minute to come back to cannabis, particularly since her mom also wasn’t fond of anyone in the family smoking weed. These days, a lot has changed. Not only is her mom “totally with it,” but she’s also recognized the very tangible benefits cannabis brings to her daughter’s life. “She has really seen how much weed helps my anxiety,” Thorne says. “My mom has seen me where the symptoms really start to come on, I get upset and my breath gets really tight. She sees me smoking weed, sees what a capable human I am, and she gets it.”

Dabbing has also regained a place in Thorne’s heart and routine, though she maintains that, at her core, she’s truly a flower enthusiast, hence why Forbidden Flowers launched as a flower line first and foremost, with diamond-infused pre-rolls that launched earlier this year. But a peek into an alcove just off her kitchen reveals a stunning sight: a fully functional, beautiful dab bar bedecked in lush faux flora and garnished with large, lit-up marquee letters spelling out “D-A-B B-A-R.” A change of heart, indeed, though she says dabs are only an occasional indulgence at best. When juxtaposed with the other Alice in Wonderland elements adorning Thorne’s home—a wall packed with clocks, sparkles and bright colors aplenty and flowers, flowers, flowers everywhere you look—it’s clear that Thorne has aged out of her younger days with a sophisticated, discerning taste that still maintains its whimsy. Thorne’s home is both grand in scale and inviting: a deft trick, to be sure.

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