I don't stay in accent or anything, but internally, I get quite dark and destroy myself a little bit. But that's what I do, and I enjoy it. It's how I do my work.

When someone shouts 'Skins' at you, its funny the first time. But after a hundred times, you think, 'I do have a name.'

The best part about doing 'Wuthering Heights' was you were completely in that world. It could not have been done with CGI. You had to be there.

I do have a lot of respect for the girls in 'Hollyoaks.' It takes a lot of effort to look like that constantly. I couldn't do it.

'Skins' has been such a great thing for our generation - I don't want it to become a parody of itself.

My friends still see me as the girl they went to school with. We're very much home bunnies.

It's important to enjoy the moment.

I'm not good at dressing up. I always feel a bit out of place. It's just not me - high heels and designer dresses - and I can't seem to get used to it.

My mother is amazing. She moved from Surrey to London, taught herself English, and found a job.

I wasn't good at anything very much at school, but I did like drama.

I consider myself a Londoner first, and then I consider myself Brazilian before I consider myself English.

On 'Skins,' we only ever filmed for a couple of months in the summer. When I wasn't on set, I was doing my normal things.

A lot of my friends back home are boys, so I do well with boys I like.

I love my job every day. So whether it's for four years or for two weeks, it's still... And when you're working on a set, it feels like a family straight away.

I don't think there is enough youth employment or enough push for youths to kind of do want they want to do.

I'm not the best auditioner.

I'm a Londoner, so I'm a bit feisty.

It was hard to go into the world and start auditioning as real actors. Having to pay bills was rather scary, too.

It's nice to know that a studio is willing to put a female in a film without expecting the character to have a love interest.

Everyone asks, 'What's your goal? Do you want to win an Oscar? Do you want to work with Meryl Streep?' No! I want to buy my mum a house. I want to make her proud.

As a teenager, you're still discovering who you are, what your life is about, and who you want to be as a person. It's very intense.

I was very hesitant about doing a period film. It was very much out of my comfort zone; I'd never done anything like that before.

I would have loved the opportunity to have gone to drama school, but it just didn't work out for me; there are always several paths, and there's a reason why I've been down this path.

I am quite proud that I managed to prove that you don't have to be able to afford drama school or have the right connections to do well.

We come from a very humble background. A lot of my paycheck from 'Skins' went to paying the bills and getting us a new sofa.

I like to have fun. I'm also a bit of the crazy one. All my friends are boys. I was bullied a lot by girls in school. There was also too much drama and demands.

I think of women as an all-being creature.

We should just be good humans.

I've wanted to produce for a long time. I'd love to get a bunch of my girlfriends together - a female writer, a female director - and create something. Creatively, it's a different dimension. Why wouldn't people want that?

I can't wait to take my son to see 'Wonder Woman' - I can't wait to show him all the female characters can be well-rounded people.

I think really good drama comes down to real human emotion. That's what makes us all tick, and that's what I've always been drawn to when it comes to scripts is real human emotion and dealing with that.

I think a lot of people, when they don't quite fit in in the world, use humor to combat that and to find their place in society.

I played American when I was, like, fourteen, and I was awful. I cringed the whole way through.

I'd love to find a really good Brazilian project, an up and coming director or something. I wouldn't want to do the typical favela story, Brazilian cinema has a lot more to offer than just that.

Donald Trump has come under fire for recommending U.S. citizens accused of terrorism be prosecuted before military tribunals. But despite the criticism, Trump's concerns are not only merited - they are, in fact, within the bounds of the law.

When you reach across the aisle and open your heart and mind, you might just find that you have more in common than you think with the guy on the other side of the fence.

The Electoral College is provided for in Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution. More space in the Constitution is devoted to laying out the Electoral College than to any other concept in the document.

The Fourth Amendment protects the privacy of us all - from ordinary citizens up to candidates for president. If we allow this precious right to be ignored when dealing with a presidential campaign, it can be ignored when dealing with the rest of us.

If the Democrats want to make an efficacy or merit-based argument with respect to the Electoral College, then by all means make it. It ought to be based in history and fact not fanciful revisionist history, and it should be made not just during an election year because of discontent with the electoral outcome.

Donald Trump became President of the United States because of a simple but potent combination of promises: draining the swamp, building the wall, correcting free trade imbalances, and making America great again.

The United States is a constitutional republic, and the Founding Fathers fought to ensure that the mob couldn't undermine it.

Thankfully, President Trump doesn't just complain about problems - he solves them.

My political career began on the other side of the fence from the liberal filmmaker Michael Moore - both literally and figuratively. As a young intern for the Bush-Cheney 2004 campaign, I was tasked with attending a Moore rally four days before the general election.

Sensationalism is entertaining, but substance is what matters.

When choosing the president of the United States and the leader of the free world, your desire to have a beer with a candidate should be your last concern. Let's keep our president in the Oval Office and out of the bars.

My post-mastectomy life is not one embattled but emboldened.

The coronavirus has yet again exposed the strong contrast between President Trump - who is working ardently for the American people - and a Democratic Party with little interest in anything besides taking him down. President Trump, for his part, has taken unprecedented action to thwart the spread of the virus.

It is clear that the radical left has taken over the Democratic Party, leaving behind the party of John F. Kennedy.

The radical Left wants control over the lives of the American people and will sink to any depths to get it.

America's bastions of free thought have become hubs of suppression. If you're on the left, riot in the streets without repercussion. But if you're on the right, speak at your own peril.