Emma Watson covers New York Times' T Style Magazine Fashion Fall 2012 issue. In the interview with the mag, the 22-year-old 'Perks of Being a Wallflower' actress reveals the reasons she waited this long to make other movies after the 'Harry Potter' series and discusses fame and the best piece of advice she received from her parents.
Lovely Emma Watson covers the New
York Times T Style Magazine Fashion Fall 2012 issue. The
22-year-old 'Perks of Being a Wallflower' actress sat down for a
chat with the mag and revealed the reasons she waited this long to
make other movies after 'Harry Potter'. Besides, she discusses fame
and shares the best piece of advice her parents gave her.
Watson plays Sam in the 'Perks of Being a Wallflower', an
adaptation of Stephen Chbosky's coming-of-age novel. And it seems
that talented Emma did a great job when it came to sustaining an
American accent.
"My grandma said — when I was really young and I’d sing along to
the radio — why do you sing in an American accent? I guess it was
because a lot of the music I was listening to had American
vocalists. And that was something Steve said to me as well: try
singing the lines in an American accent. That kind of opened me up.
Then I worked with a dialogue coach and I just put in the time to
really, really listen and just go over it and over it and over it
until I could do it without thinking about it too hard. And I just
knew it was really important," she says.
Asked why she’s waited this long to make other movies after the
Harry Potter series, the actress explained that, "I think at first
I didn’t because I was always either studying or filming, I didn’t
have time to go off and do other films or other things to sort of
show people that, Oh, she is not just Hermione, she is an actress
and she can go and do these other parts and roles. . . . I didn’t,
because I was so focused on, you know, on my GCSEs and on my AS and
on my A-levels and then getting in to university and then whatever,
I didn’t really have time to do any of that."
Speaking about Daniel Radcliffe's performance in Peter Shaffer’s
'Equus', Emma says that it was "incredibly brave, and I think
people were impressed by his dedication and his work ethic. I mean
he did it when he was, like, 17, and that play is dark and
demanding and, yeah, and you’ve quite literally got to be ballsy to
do it."
Watson ended up attending Brown University and completed her junior
year as a transfer student at Oxford University. "My first two
years at Brown weren’t easy, not because I was bullied or because
anyone gave me a particularly hard time, but just because, you
know, without the collegiate system ... and at Brown everyone does
completely different things and very much chooses their own path,
which is great, but it’s also much more difficult, too. You’re not
with a group of people all the time at one time," the actress
confessed in the interview.
In the interview with New York Times, Emma also reveals the best
piece of advice she received from her parents. "Yeah, I think I’ve
been lucky in that neither of my parents got swept up in it, it
wasn’t something they wanted for me, it wasn’t something that they
were overawed by. They gave me the best advice they could, and I
think they gave me very good advice," she says.
"But my mum particularly said, 'Right, you’re going to go into
these interviews and they’re going to ask you anything they feel
like asking you, and every time they ask you a question, think
about whether you’d be comfortable discussing it with a
stranger.'"
Well, celebrity can be a tricky business. And Watson definitely
knows this. "If I went to somewhere busy, I wouldn’t last very
long. I can’t go to a museum, I’ll last 10 or 15 minutes in a
museum. The problem is that when one person asks for a photograph,
then someone sees a flash goes off, then everyone else sort of . .
. it’s sort of like a domino effect. And then very quickly the
situation starts to get out of control to a point where I can’t
manage it on my own," she explains.
Read Emma Watson's complete interview in New York Times' T Style
Fall Fashion Issue 2012.
Photos courtesy of NEW YORK TIMES


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