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Find most favourite and famour Authors from A.A Milne to Zoe Kravitz.
I love retro culture. I love retro games; I love retro music.
Finn Wolfhard
To see a hacker actually hacking is not the most interesting thing visually, and it's pretty boring as an actor: a hacker taps on her keyboard. There's really not much more than that.
I mean if anyone's comfortable being famous, they're a psychopath.
I do ride my bike a lot.
For me, I need to listen to music in the morning, and after, it's kind of like a shower, you know what I mean? It's kind of getting rid of everything. I always play music after I act. It's not a conscious thing, like, 'Oh finally, I need to do this,' it's kind of a constant need.
It's going to sound cheesy, but if I have family and friends I don't really care where I am.
Well, I kind of did the math in my head when I was like, 9. I was like, 'Well, if I want to make films' - because I want to be a director - 'I could just go on a film set and learn there.' And then I ended up falling in love with acting and the set and making friends all the time. And so I've just been doing that ever since.
I love being Canadian.
I'm good at reading people. If I wasn't an actor, I would be a psychologist.
My whole thing is having the perfect balance. Let's say I go to school. I have a day at school. That's the perfect amount of reality. Then I go and play music with my band. Then I go home and hang out with my family and my pets. I think that's the perfect amount of reality time.
I'm definitely not eager to grow up, but I do like some adult stuff.
I wanted to do something in film. I wanted to make my own movies. Something clicked in my brain, like, 'Oh, I can physically act! I can go on open casting calls and audition for something.'
My dad is a screenwriter, so he always used to watch movies for inspiration when I was a baby. I would watch movies with him, I guess, in the background.
When I was younger, I acted in some Shakespeare stuff; I did one Shakespeare camp.
I don't take the Internet and social media very seriously. I've grown up around social media but to me what happens on the Internet just doesn't feel real.
I love acting, of course, and I would still love to keep acting, but I want to try my hands at so many things.
I definitely do have a persona onstage. I definitely am a completely different person, but I'm still having a lot of fun and there's a lot of acting that goes into it. But I haven't been playing many shows when I'm working on acting as much because it's tiring, number one. And number two, it's hard for your mind to makeup what it wants to do.
I love learning on set, it's the best acting school ever.
If I lounge around for too long, I get really bored. I have to be doing something.
Meeting Ryan Reynolds was really cool, and Blake Lively.
I've been asked to school dances.
I don't want to be mean to people. I try to be as nice as possible to everyone.
I was raised in a household where kids' opinions were just as valued as adults and I think that was important for me.
Honestly, if acting never worked out, I would have done music.
Everyone wants to be funny. Maybe not everyone, but to an extent.
People deal with death differently; some even laugh at funerals.
Sewer rats are really gross.
Okay, I like the Clash. I like Tears for Fears. I like A-ha.
One day I'm going to open up a club or a concert venue where it's all ages and really fun. That'd be awesome.
The biggest thing for me, I hate going to concerts where no-one's moving. Everyone should be dancing and having a good time.
I love doing both animation and live acting.
I think if I'm with a friend group, I try to be as funny as possible, and I don't always succeed, obviously.
Most of the fans of Calpurnia are 'Stranger Things' fans, which is not a big deal at all. They're super loyal and incredible, and really do like the music. It's the people who aren't fans of the music and are just there because of 'Stranger Things' that really bother me.
I learn a new thing every single day about acting, about directing, about producing.
Messing up lines is always embarrassing for me.
The Goonies' I love. 'Heathers' too.
I'd seen all of John Hughes's movies. All the Spielberg stuff. A bunch of '80s horror, like 'Evil Dead.'
I think growing up in Vancouver is a different lifestyle than growing up in most other places.
During 'Stranger Things 3,' I shot 'It: Chapter Two,' so I would shoot on my days off, which was super tiring and stressful, but really rewarding at the same time. Basically, I shot 'It: Chapter Two' and 'Stranger Things 3' at the same time.
Yeah, ever since I was super-young I had a lot of dreams - I wanted to be a musician, I wanted to be a skateboarder.
I think I'm really bad at voice acting.
My parents were in high school and college in the '80s, so let's just say I've heard some stuff, man. We listen to a lot of music and watch lots of great films, but the real context they provide from that era is about politics.
I try to keep my voice natural for each character, but the spirit and the cadence and breathing for each character is totally different. It's those things that set each role apart from the others.
I never liked horror up until I was like 10 years old.
I need time to do whatever I want to do. What happens to an actor that has no life experience? They don't know how to act as a different role. So, that's really important to do.
I don't want to get typecast and I've been doing a lot of stuff to make that happen and not be the case.
We need musicians! We need them healthy - we need to dance and we need to escape - and none of that is possible when musicians themselves need support.
I'd recommend anyone watch 'Harold and Maude,' 'cause it helps a lot with fear of death.
There's always something really bad that happens in 'Stranger Things,' I think the more fun we're having at the beginning, the higher the drop.
Like, everyone knows that we all need health care, but not only is it insanely expensive for most people in America, there are so many self-employed people who really struggle when faced with injury and disability and illness.