Natalie Dormer Quotes
Top 89 wise famous quotes and sayings by Natalie Dormer
Natalie Dormer Famous Quotes & Sayings
Discover top inspirational quotes from Natalie Dormer on Wise Famous Quotes.
No one thinks that they're a monster. No one thinks that of themselves. Everyone has an earnest belief that it would be better if they were in power.
As an actress, as you get older, you find yourself in a situation where you play mothers or women who are hoping to be mothers.
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?
I'm a London girl, so I grew up on Alexander McQueen and Vivienne Westwood ... Dior, Chanel, the usual suspects.
When you have that long, flowing hair, you feel different - when you cut it, the framing of your face changes immediately.
As an actor, your text is your bible, so you're not making a documentary, but you still have to follow the choices made by your writer.
I think women have always been trying to look healthy. The makeup artists just teach you the quick cheats.
I don't know if I'm a daredevil, exactly, but I do enjoy a good challenge. It's the only way you grow.
Women have a lot of ... attitudes enforced in us about our sense of attractiveness being bound up in long, flowing, Hollywood kind of hair.
I do as much research as is physically possible when I'm playing a real person, be they alive or dead.
The Tudors") "I walked away thinking, well, if I don't get the job, it doesn't matter - I've kissed Jonathan Rhys Meyers!
I think we all remember Emma Peel from 'The Avengers,' the feminist icon that she was in the late '60s.
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 always tell people this: to be a savvy politician or a good head of state and to be charitable are not mutually exclusive things.
I feel like I've really earnt my stripes - I feel ready to play a lead. I would just love to prove I'm good enough to carry a project.
I love being part of huge mega blockbusters, and I love being a part of small independent films and small stage.
What makes me really happy is a walk in the English countryside. A nice sunset, that British countryside - it means I'm home.
We don't have enough young, female antiheroes. We don't accept women as antiheroes the way we do the men.
My yoga mat comes everywhere. Keeps me stretched out after sitting still on all those planes, trains and road journeys.
When you play a real person, you feel a sense of responsibility that obviously you don't feel when you're playing a fictional character.
It's fascinating how much of our sense of attractiveness and feminine identity is bound up in our 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.
I'm a serial monogamist and would never dream of being as predatory as some of the women I've played. I can actually be a bit shy.
I don't think you have to live in the fantasy world of Westeros to have problems with your mother-in-law.
There's a part of my heart that forever has Anne Boleyn written on it, who I played in 'The Tudors.'
I would love to go to the Himalayas and cross over into Nepal to do the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway.
More often than not, I get cast as quite Machiavellian roles - it's something about my face; I'm quite shifty or something!
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?
I've played a lot of elegance and refinement, so to do something really down and dirty is a great attraction.
When I was a little girl, my grandfather, who I was very close to, used to grow yellow roses. He had yellow roses growing all the way up his drive.
For me, the sexiest men don't know they're drop-dead gorgeous. Not that I'd ever rule out a pot-bellied plumber in the right circumstances.