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Swedish actress Rebecca Ferguson won't tolerate disrespect on her movie sets, even if you're number one on the call sheet.

The "Dune: Part Two" star reflected on a past on-set experience when an A-list star made disparaging remarks toward her.

"I did a film with an absolute idiot of a co-star," she admitted to Josh Smith on his "Reign" podcast. "This human being was being so insecure and angry because [they] couldn’t get the scenes out. And I think I was so vulnerable and uncomfortable that I got screamed at and I would cry walking off set."

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Rebecca Ferguson looks serious on the carpet in a black gown with a silver spiked shoulder

Rebecca Ferguson opened up about a moment in her past where she stood up for herself on set. (Wiktor Szymanowicz/Future Publishing via Getty Images)

Careful not to give anything away about the co-star, Ferguson detailed the discomfort she felt: "This person would literally look at me in front of the whole crew and say, ‘You call yourself an actor? This is what I have to work with?… What is this?’ And I stood there just breaking.

"And I remember the next day I walked on and I said, ‘You get off my set.’ That's the first time I [had] ever spoken — I remember being so scared. And I looked at this person and I said, ‘You can F off. I’m gonna work toward a tennis ball. I never want to see you again.’"

Tom Cruise in a black suit looks longingly at Rebecca Ferguson on the carpet as they're interviewed

Ferguson has worked with Tom Cruise on several "Mission Impossible" films and says he is not the actor that she had a problem with on set. (Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures)

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Rebecca Ferguson poses with her hand on her hip in a dress next to Hugh Jackman in a grey pantsuit

Ferguson also clarified that Hugh Jackman was not the individual she was referencing. (Dave Benett/Getty Images for Warner Bros)

Ferguson clarified that neither A-lister Tom Cruise nor Hugh Jackman, with whom she's worked on several projects, were the people she was referencing. 

The "Mission Impossible" actress has worked alongside some of the biggest names in Hollywood, including Meryl Streep and Hugh Grant in "Florence Foster Jenkins," Emily Blunt in "The Girl on the Train" and Zendaya, Timothée Chalamet and Florence Pugh in "Dune."

Rebecca Ferguson looks serious on the carpet with long blonde hair as she stares at the camera

Ferguson recalled not feeling supported by executives on set when she had trouble with a co-star. (Angela Weiss/AFP via Getty Images)

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Continuing with her story, Ferguson said she didn't feel support from executives. "And then I remember the producers came up and said, ‘You can’t do this to No. 1. We have to let this person be on set,’" she explained. "And I said, ‘But the person can turn around and I can act to the back [of their] head.’ And I did.

"It took so long for me to get to that. It's within my last 10 years or 12 years. And I've acted since I was 16. But from that moment, I have never let myself get to a point when I've got home and gone, ‘What did, why did that happen?’"

Dwayne 'The Rock" Johnson smiles in a grey checkered blazer on the carpet

Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson showed his support for his "Hercules" co-star Ferguson. (Tibrina Hobson/Getty Images)

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Ferguson's comments have consequently gone viral, prompting one of her former co-stars to seemingly clear his name while giving his support. 

Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson wrote on X, "Hate seeing this but love seeing her stand up to bull---. Rebecca was my guardian angel sent from heaven on our set. I love that woman. I’d like to find out who did this."

The two worked together on the 2014 film "Hercules."