I never did a dirty armpit. You can look dirty, but you can't be dirty.

Now I can walk into a room full of people I don't know and do my job. That's quite a massive thing to learn, I think.

At night, I love dressing up. I love putting on an outfit.

I'm still having fun, and I'm doing something and I'm seeing the world! I wasn't massively ambitious, but I did always want to do the best I could do.

I was a scapegoat. The media had to put responsibility on somebody, and I was chosen. They felt free to say that because someone was thin they were anorexic, which is ridiculous.

That Lana Del Rey is quite cute, isn't she? I quite like her.

I thought it was quite vain to say, I want to be a model.

Yeah, I like clothes, but I hardly ever go shopping. Hardly ever!

Then finally I said, 'Okay, well, I want to know all the details. I want creative input. I want to be consulted. I want to know what they're doing and who's involved. And I want to see the space.' So they took me to see it, and then I realized it was major! All these red flags on the Rue de Rivoli with my name on them right by the Louvre!

When you're in a relationship with a photographer, and they start abusing that relationship and being like, 'I want you to do this, and I want you to do that,' it makes you go, 'No.' I didn't want to work all the time.

I was never anorexic, so I was never that skinny. I was never bony-bony. But I remember thinking, I don't want to be this skinny.

I'm not going to be horrible just for the sake of having attitude or make other people feel small just to make me feel bigger.

All of a sudden I was living what is perceived to be the model life. It was just full-on, 24 hours a day. It was work all the time. And there's always a party to go to.

I didn't realize it. It looks like my career happened overnight, but it didn't. I was basically living on my own from when I was 17 on.

Every season, I'm like, 'Who knows if I'm going to get another job?'

I have met almost everyone I've wanted to meet.

I was lucky to be with Johnny... he taught me a lot about fame.

Going to the gym wouldn't be on my list of favorite things to do.

I had tried to get focused on other things. But I always ended up back in the same place, and it wasn't making me happy. I needed to get the focus back.

People that don't know me get 'Mossed'. It means, I was gonna go home, but then I just got led astray. In the best possible way, of course. I mean, it's always fun, and a good time.

I would say I'm self-taught, but Corinne Day made me less conscious of myself. I was 15, and she'd make me take off my top, and I'd cry. After five years, you get used to it, and you're not self-conscious anymore.

I'd go on the train to castings, changing from my school uniform on the train. I carried on like that for a few years, getting jobs in bits and pieces.

I always wear red lipstick.

When I was young I was listening to the Spice Girls and Destiny's Child. I was singing 'Independent Woman' and 'Survivor,' and it was all about Girl Power and being with your friends. I don't think I was singing, 'Don't cha wish your girlfriend was hot like me?'

I would say that I'm opinionated and clumsy and I am definitely led by my heart over my head.

When you're a woman, you have such a strange relationship with your body because - especially when you're in the public eye - you're constantly being judged.

I can't even begin to grasp concepts like the multiverse.

Filming 'Glow' helped with my confidence.

There were so many weird shows when we were younger. 'Clangers.' 'Button Moon.' 'The Moomins.' All very weird, but very cool too.

I formulate my style based on a range of influences from books to films and my moods.

I once got asked in an interview: 'Does it annoy you that the majority of your fans are teenage girls?' I was insulted and angry because it was sexist and ageist.

I have really bad anxiety and OCD. I get afraid of everyone I know dying.

A woman's body and a woman's image is a very political thing, so I trust another woman to understand what that's like and how to portray it in a way people can relate to.

I want to be in a Tarantino movie, more than anything in the world.

I love throwing parties and being sociable and dancing. But I also have this other homebody side and can become quite isolated and anxious.

People have said I'm too fat to be a pop star.

I got into punk at 17 after discovering an all-girl band from Long Island on the Internet called The Devotchkas - four crazy-looking girls with fast, driving basslines and high-pitched gang vocals who shared the same dress sense as the punks I used to eye up curiously in Camden.

A lot of men just don't understand what it's like to be a woman and how much our bodies mean and what they can be and how much power they can yield, and how much we're shamed for them.

Artists often have mental health issues. And their lifestyles are unstable because of all the travelling and the media commentary on their lives.

On tour it's hard to be vegetarian, especially in Europe because vegetarianism is basically unheard of. They think you're either joking or mad.

I like being girly. I used to wear jeans all the time and tracksuit bottoms but then I was like, really all I want to be like is Marilyn Monroe so why am I wearing these?

I'm worried about being pigeonholed as an artist, especially a female one, but I think, essentially, it's the music which people judge you by.

I'll always be playing shows. Even when I'm a crazy granny wearing weird old granny clothes and wandering around with dementia, I'll still be playing. Whether anyone else will turn up is another question.

I think Berlin is always inspiring. I love being in Berlin. It feels like such a cool city, with so much culture and art and independence everywhere.

I love skeletons and bones so much.

My biggest crush when I was 13 was Leonardo DiCaprio. After I watched 'Titanic' I was completely in love with him.

My mum's got morals and principles, and I've been brought up with those ideas and beliefs.

Hair is so important and emotional. I dyed mine black and blond after a breakup - there's something really powerful about changing your hair when you're in a weird place.

I grew up in Harrow, London, with two sisters. I am the middle child and a natural ginger, so fiery by nature.

Listening to Bikini Kill's Kathleen Hanna gave me the confidence I needed to get up on stage and be photographed every night on tour.