I worked out; I moved 16 times from the age of 19, just hopping about from different flats, because I couldn't always afford to stay.
I'd like to do something that involves music.
My mom is my hero, I look up to my sisters. ... There are so many women I look up to.
I want a house with a garden, but slap bang in the centre of London. Next door to a sushi bar.
I'm the youngest of three sisters, and my parents have always encouraged all of us to do whatever made us happy.
I'm quite into the French way - simple elegance with just a suggestion of sexiness, nothing vulgar.
I don't have to walk around in hats or find remote places to go for lunch! I don't get recognised that often.
I really enjoy singing, it's entirely different to acting because I'm just being myself.
I don't get recognized all the time, but it tends to happen more in America, and people are so lovely when they do.
If Shakespeare was around today I would ask him out to dinner. The only thing I don't like about him is the way he did his hair.
Shakespeare's work is like a good song you never really forget the main lines.
I don't mind wearing a corset, it informs your posture, changes the way you move, you can't slouch.
I get so excited about reading a new script.
I can be so blown away by story lines.
I love discovering tiny streets.
I regret not learning to drive when I was younger.
I think so often you can come out of drama school and get thrown in the deep end.
I wasn't an academic. I hated maths and science at school. I couldn't concentrate.
I'm not from aristocracy, or anything like that.
I'm not on Twitter, but I am on Instagram and follow Lena Dunham and Usher.
I'm taller than most actresses, so most corsets tend to be too short in the body.
In my twenties, I was a bit of a worrier; it bothered me what people thought of me, what job I was doing.
In the early '20s, with the war over, there was a period of celebration, and you can see it in the fashion.
It's always fun to play dress up.