We all have dark shadows in our self that come out every now and then.
Jessie Buckley
It's ridiculous that Claire Foy got paid less than Matt Smith on 'The Crown.' That makes absolutely no sense whatsoever.
I moved away when I was 17. It's been a mad journey, but I've met and made some incredible friends.
We all have the ability to be dangerous and do things which are morally wrong.
I like feeling out of my depth.
To hold on to what you believe is just and right.
I did it all, singing, the harp, piano. But I was so shy, I'd wake up at six to practice piano because I didn't want anyone to hear me play. But then I'd do a big show in school where everyone would see me, and that was actually alright.
When you get the opportunity to work with somebody like Jude Law, there is a fear. They've got lots of stuff under their belt.
I get huge solace from chaos, especially if someone else is doing it, too, like, 'Thank God it's not just me!'
We've all, you know, done things that we think at the time were bad, but actually, in hindsight, you look back and go, 'I'm really grateful that happened because I'm a stronger person.'
Some songs just resonate with you.
My mum is a singer and harpist, and my dad writes fantastic poetry, so we've grown up around a lot of words and music.
I did 'I'd Do Anything,' and then a play and then 'A Little Light Music.' I played jazz in a night club where nobody listened to me for two years. I sold cereal in a market for a while. I worked in a clothes shop in Brixton. But that's the life of an actor. You never really know when your next job is coming.
I never choose jobs because of what I think I should do. I want to feel something. And with 'Beast,' it was very much like that.
Dad would always play Ray Charles in the car on the way to swimming, then we'd sing musicals. Now my heroes are Janis Joplin and Bonnie Raitt and Max Richter.
Language is so important to the Irish, almost regardless of education.
Ideally, when you play a character, she goes away with half of you, and you go away with half of her. And you learn something.
I am incredibly lucky. I worked hard for my luck as well. I have made choices to do things because I wanted them to do them, not because they were the right thing to do.
I just want to keep working with great actors and try to be good at what I do.
When I was younger, about 15, I suffered badly from depression.
I like feeling like I could probably fail, because it makes me find a part of myself that I didn't really know: an inner fighter in me.
I get asked a lot about being a woman within the industry and how difficult it is, and yeah, it is - but it's difficult for everybody... I'm not a 'burn-your-bra' feminist.
I just know that making 'Beast' was an amazing experience. It was my first feature, it was the director's first feature, and every day, you're just trying to do good work and learn.
The people who are inspiring and strong for me are the ones who acknowledge vulnerabilities.
At the end of the day, whether it's on film or on stage or for a crowd of however many at Kenwood House, my job is to make sure people have a good time and come away with a feeling and a story.
Sure, nobody ever recognises me. I'm always scurrying around London under a hat and looking like a homeless person.
There have been moments in my life when I've become numb to certain aspects of myself that I found frightening. Or I've conformed to certain morals of society and then maybe rebelled or found a way out.
Inherently in us as Irish people, wherever you are in the world, when you hear an Irish accent, it's like a moth to a flame. There's a real personable pride and camaraderie about being Irish.
Tom Hardy is such a good egg. He's a total teddy bear. He loves his dogs and his kids. He's a true artist. But he's a lovely, naughty, funny man.
I absolutely adore singing, and I hope I'll always be able to sing, but you can grow more and challenge yourself more as an actor.
I love London, but I miss air; I miss space. My dream is to find a mountain where I can live.
Filming a story set in a war zone in the '60s was such a treat, as it gave me so much scope to dive into.
I remember hearing that when Judi Dench was starting out at the Old Vic, she used to stand by the side of the stage watching the actors around her, and I can see why: That is where you really learn!
I feel really lucky to have had 'War and Peace' as my first big telly job. I was playing this incredible character, and we were shooting in Catherine the Great's palace near St. Petersburg in the winter, when the river was frozen. It was a dream. I still can't believe it. I wanted to soak up every last minute.
I really value my anonymity and privacy.
I've been incredibly fortunate to have so many people believe in me.
Always good to shake it up and do something different.
Sometimes you meet characters at certain points in your life and have a connection with them.
I don't like to get too complacent. I like to give myself five panic attacks per project.
I had to be an adult very quickly and didn't have any friends.
I think I'd make a good James Bond... I'm joking.
'War and Peace' is about relationships: family relationships, loving relationships, relationships at war... it's a really young story as well.
Christmas in the Buckley household is hilarious - at the family dinner, we all have to do a song, no matter if you can sing in tune.
I like to be out of my depth - that's when I learn the most.
It's easy to sort of put a sheen across humanity if you're making a film for people who want to escape their own problems. But sometimes a movie can, in the most cathartic ways, expose those problems.
Whatever has happened in your past, it's - you can never deny it. I mean, you can never wash what's happened before in your life out of you.
I like to play kind of the girls-that-eat-worms kind of character.
I love the flaws and foibles of people - I'm much more interested in that than perfections.
I want film stories to provoke a question in people about what's going on emotionally around them and empower them in some way or ask them about themselves.
The archetype of male hero is so boring. And the pretty, boobed woman is so... boring.