I hope I'll consider my next part, having learnt from this one.
I used to hate being recognised.
I thought people would ask me really personal questions because I've shown more of myself, but it's a comedy, and people understand that it's a game we play.
I still find it hard to push my own limits. I know where my limits are and that I always have to push myself.
I hated seeing myself on screen. I was full of complexes. I hated my face for a very, very long time.
I found it very difficult to explain to someone why you did a film. It's not like having a conversation.
Girls can wear jeans, cut their hair short, wear shirts and boots, 'cause it's okay to be a boy, but for a boy to look like a girl is degrading.
At the beginning it wasn't to do with the work, it was more the experience.
The more you turn down things, the more difficult it becomes to feel that the next one will be right.
Everyone gets the feeling that they know you and they know your life, and I felt really embarrassed by that.
The more sincere I could be, the better it would be for the film.
The English was really my mother, it was never me. Being the daughter of my father, I always felt very French.
I went on television and I wouldn't say a word; I feel so stupid when I watch them again.
There were always questions about my parents; I got so fed up with that.
The character is close to me, except that I haven't lived through those situations, so it's not completely me.