Zitat des Tages von Natalie Dormer:
My role as Ewan McGregor's girlfriend in the film 'Incendiary' ended up on the cutting-room floor, but at least I had two brilliant days of acting with Ewan.
I did every job under the sun from bartending to ushering to temping.
Sometimes a woman's looks or sensuality are too readily wrapped up in their power.
The world is changing so quickly, and actors now have this huge platform of social media to interact with their audiences, but I choose not to have a social media footprint. I'm old-school like that.
The most amazing set where I've shot 'Game of Thrones' is definitely Croatia, in Dubrovnik. It's such a stunning country with lots of good watersports there as well. Just a beautiful, beautiful place.
I've never been far from the river. I'm sort of like a Thames-nymph.
I've been insane from a very early age.
I think the beauty of the writing of 'Game of Thrones' is not that the characters are fearless; it's how they overcome their fear, you know?
I was frequently told at drama school that I was thinking too much. And I still have to suppress that part of me because it can sometimes be a hindrance.
Emilia Clarke has beautiful brunette hair.
As a child, I was prancing around in my mother's high heels and a ra-ra skirt, singing 'Material Girl' into my hairbrush.
Nothing is taken lightly in 'The Hunger Games.'
Isn't it lovely to know that even the great Sherlock Holmes, the quirky and genius Sherlock Holmes, is vulnerable to love as we all are?
Sci-fi always runs out a little bit ahead of reality, right? Automatic doors in 'Star Trek,' stuff like that. It all happened, didn't it, finally?
It really bugs me the way people criticise how actors look. We're not models. Models exist.
You'd have to be an idiot to say no to 'Hunger Games.'
As an actor, you spend a lot of your life in hotel rooms.
I'm very lucky to be in projects that have such skilled writing in them.
My first time to Rome was when I was backpacking with my best friend around Europe for a month at 18 years old, so I remember that excitement of being away from home properly for the first time.
There's a part of my heart that forever has Anne Boleyn written on it, who I played in 'The Tudors.'
I love my camera crews on all my jobs. It's the half of the job that the audience never gets to see. They're integral. They're as much a part of making a movie or television show as I am.
Jennifer Lawrence is just the coolest girl.
More often than not, I get cast as quite Machiavellian roles - it's something about my face; I'm quite shifty or something!
I'm a 'Blackadder' girl.
Because of my job, I get a lot of opportunity to grab a few days here and there in many cool cities for press commitments, magazine shoots and premieres - Barcelona, Madrid, Rome, Paris, Stockholm, New York, Berlin. I always try to get to a gallery or museum if there's time.
I would love to go to the Himalayas and cross over into Nepal to do the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway.
The beauty of 'The Hunger Games' and also 'Game of Thrones,' in fairness, both projects have really complex, three-dimensional, contradictory, strong women... The writing of female characters is extraordinary and equal to the men.
I love watching the old movies. I love Katharine Hepburn. I just adore her and everything that she stood for. I find it interesting watching the likes of Gene Tierney and those classic movies of the '40s.
There was a woman in Elizabeth I's court that happened to have the same family name as me.
I'm a feminist in the true sense of the word. It's about equality.
We live in one of the most complex ages for young, professional women.
When I turn on the news in Paris, the way Syria is covered is different from the way it is covered in Washington, D.C., or London. Even in Western society, where we hold all the values of democracy and freedom of speech, as soon as you point a camera in a particular direction, there is an angle - literally and figuratively.
Being seduced by a man on crutches was an interesting experience.
I'm glad that cinema is catching up to what television has known for a while: That three-dimensional, complex women get an audience engaged as much as the men.
There's a real mischievousness about Irishmen, don't you find?
I love going out of my comfort zone - I live to go out of my comfort zone.