We can stop the cycle of animal homelessness and save lives by opening our hearts and homes to a loving cat or dog from an animal shelter instead of buying animals from breeders or pet shops.
Amy Jackson
It's not easy, but I'm really enjoying what I am doing. One day I am in Chennai, the other in Mumbai, then in Coimbatore. But I love my job, and I am really passionate about my work.
The hardest thing for me was leaving my friends and family behind.
My dad did a radio show. I was on it when I was seven. So now you know that the showbiz bug bit me really early.
I love a mix of kickboxing, gym, yoga, Pilates, horse riding, and dancing. I also do skinny rappelling, which is a quick cardio workout with music and lighting, so it's fun.
I have become like a rhinoceros - thick-skinned - all the gossip about my numerous affairs does not bother me anymore.
I am all for healthy living and maintaining a fit lifestyle.
I'm a huge fan of Nawazuddin.
Every time someone buys a cat or a dog from a breeder or a pet shop, a cat on the streets or in an animal shelter loses his or her chance at finding a good home.
I generally like to stay fit.
Working with Shankar is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.
Completely overwhelmed, it is huge project to be working on 'Singh Is Bliing.' How everyone is enjoying the film is everything to me. Definitely, it is the biggest milestone of my career.
Like most girls, I suffered from pimples, too. I tried dozens of treatments but was never satisfied with any.
When I was 17, my sister and I used to drive back from school in her car and sing the Spice Girls' chartbusters from the '90s at the top of our voices.
Back in England, a girl with thick black hair, dusky skin and big brown eyes will turn heads. It is vice versa in India.
I've got Indian looks, but there is nothing in my background.
I look forward to Pond's products to deliver better skincare for girls everywhere.
Acting is my passion, but I like hosting shows, too.
It is my job to step into different characters.
At home, I'm just Amy, but in India, I get mobbed.
I used to dress up in my older sister Alisia's clothes and thought modelling would be fun.
I actually didn't find too many differences between B-town and the south. The difference lies in the temperature. I was shooting when it was 45 degrees Celsius in Chennai; Mumbai is cooler.
I am a Christian, and since the age of five I have been singing... chanting hymns containing the word 'Hosanna.'
When you have Khiladi Kumar on one side and Thalaiva on the other, you have to know your stuff well.
I am open to any good script and the character I can do justice to.
I just don't do the treadmill; I hate that. I do Pilates and yoga. I've recently joined aerial Pilates; you're in the air and with straps. It's crazy fun.
It makes no difference to my family where one comes from as long as we make each other happy. They are pretty cool like that.
I had so much fun working with Akshay, especially in the action scenes.
For me, age doesn't matter. You've got to go with your heart.
For my first Bollywood movie, 'Ekk Deewana Tha,' my mum also came over because Mumbai was completely new to me, and I'd heard it's a huge city.
I'd really like to make my mark in India.
For me, as an actress, you are playing a character, and to play that character, you have to get into that mindset.
Thanks to having my dad travel with me, I don't feel quite cut off from my family.
I loved having Indian take-aways on a Friday night in Liverpool, but it's so different in the real India.
As an actress, I am very happy with 'Singh Is Bliing' because that was totally different from what I have done before.
When 'I' released, I gave a couple of interviews in which I expressed my interest to play an action heroine.
I'm taking dance lessons and getting stuck in. It's a great way of keeping fit, and it's obviously a big part of Bollywood movies, so I need to learn.
Bombay is different to Liverpool, or anywhere, really.
I am conscious about not getting typecast, but obviously I have to keep picking up great roles so that I don't get typecast.
I have been away from home since I was 17.
I won Miss Teen World, and then a movie rep saw me on the pageant website and thought that I had the perfect image for the role in 'Madrasapattinam.'
I use this method to bring emotion into my performance. I recite my lines in English first, and then switch back to the original lines when shooting begins.
I am very conscious about picking my roles and make sure that they are different.
'2.0' is an entirely new thing in Indian cinema, a movie to watch out for.
The negativity will always be there. I think that's for any actress or actor. But I think you've got to take it with a pinch of salt.
I love horse-riding - I have three back home in the U.K.
I'd be getting texts from my mates saying they'd just got into a club in Liverpool with a fake ID, and what was I doing? I'd have just finished a 20-hour day and be sitting in a hotel room, starving.
I love my pets, and I'm a big animal lover. I also enjoy the nature and countryside.
I can't believe all this is happening to me, but I am definitely here to stay. And I am happy to be in Indian cinema.
I love art and finding different bits and bobs for the apartment; so, I'm adding all my personal touches to the house.