At the age of 11, he changed his surname from Pasquale to Tracini, after narrowly missing out on the role of Harry Potter to Daniel Radcliffe.
“I did six auditions for it. It was a big rejection but I don’t think I would have survived making those films. The casting director sent me a letter which I’ve still got.
“I changed my name because I wanted to do things off my own back, I didn’t want to have something to live up to. I love my dad very much and we have a good relationship but I wanted people to like me for me,” he says.
Tracini went to musical theatre college and secured various acting and TV presenting roles, including as a series regular on the soap Hollyoaks.
But he turned to drink, drugs and self-harm as a way to quieten the negative voice in his head, that he calls “Mick”.
Tracini was diagnosed with borderline personality disorder (BPD) a decade ago, which came as a huge relief.
The diagnosis prompted him to kick his addictions. He has been sober for 10 years, after several trips to rehab.
“I felt less guilty because I knew the drink and drugs were a symptom of my BPD. I thought Mick would go away but the medication made me feel numb and changed my personality so I came off it,” he says.
During the pandemic, he gained tens of thousands of social media followers by posting comedy dance routines, dressed in a leotard.
He also went viral for a video about his BPD, describing symptoms including mood swings, impulsiveness, paranoia, fear of abandonment and chronic feelings of emptiness.