I am not a specialist but a general practitioner in the world of the arts.
When actors aren't filming they just go to their dressing rooms and relax.
There's never enough time to do nothing!
Some people are asking me questions like this is a more shocking subject, which is so strange.
I think that the process of making a film is an underrated factor in how that film turns out.
For me, you go to university to meet lots of different people from different backgrounds. I think that's one of the most important things you get there. And you also get some sense of direction regarding what you want to do when you leave. I sort of know what I want to do in my life - I want to act and ultimately I'd like to write. And in terms of meeting people from different backgrounds, that's what you get on a film set. So the two most valuable things that university would have given me I've sort of achieved by being on a film set.
I'm a serial monogamist. I'm not one of those people that can date loads of people at the same time, it's all too complicated.
I have always maintained that society has no business dictating morality.
I always liked to take the plunge, you know, I'd jump in at the deep end and hope that I'd find land somehow, or hope I'd float or survive. That's more or less the way I've gone through my life.
My friend advised me to go into studying art, which at first shocked me because art was so easy. It was just something I did, like breathing or brushing my teeth. It couldn't be a job. I had a much more difficult time writing plays, making myself sit at that typewriter and finish those things.
Football is a game played with arms, legs and shoulders but mostly from the neck up.