Words matter. These are the best Camila Morrone Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I could relate to being a 17-year-old girl and taking on more than I could handle.
Success to me would be first and foremost to have a family. I was an only child for 18 years and I’m Latino, so I love big families and creating a small home world.
If I hadn’t chosen acting, I would be a food critic.
I lived in a studio apartment with my dad for many years when he was struggling.
I felt so ashamed of my modeling history when I first got into acting, so I tried to hide that part of my life, because I didn’t want to be looked at as too sexy for a role.
I can’t really talk while I’m curtseying!
Modeling was a great opportunity to travel, to make some money in high school and it was the gateway to prepare me for getting comfortable in front of the camera.
I had a show on HGTV with my mom and grandma called ‘My Flipping Family.’
Jennifer Lawrence is a mastermind. She has no training and she’s just so naturally good.
I avoid social media and articles written about me, because I’m human and negative comments pollute my head and make me feel confused about myself.
I read a lot of scripts, but few of them stand out to me.
I’m not always hopeful about the future in general, but I’m definitely hopeful about the future of filmmaking and art.
I’m always about being comfortable. You will never see me voluntarily in a pair of heels.
There’s so many relationships in Hollywood – and in the history of the world – where people have large age gaps.
I usually stick to the classic things that I know which is a nude lip and a nude eye.
I don’t follow the relevant trends anymore. But I love Rosie Huntington-Whiteley’s style, I think she is timeless, chic, and most importantly, classy.
It’s a little bit of a bummer because you’re really trying to do good work and be nice and be a good person, and in the meantime… people wish negative things upon you.
I don’t have an unhealthy lifestyle, but I like carbs.
I’m a Latina. Everything is outspoken in my culture.
Both my parents were actors and they struggled, so I was raised with that. Being raised in this industry from a young age definitely forces you to grow up a little faster than maybe the normal kid.
I didn’t go to film school. I didn’t graduate college with an acting degree or a theater degree. I didn’t have the traditional route of training.
I go to auditions even now and people say, ‘Oh, she’s too pretty,’ or ‘She doesn’t look like a small-town girl or a girl in high school who would get bullied.’ But that’s the whole point of being an actress – you can look glamorous when you’re on the red carpet, and then bring it all down and be raw onscreen.
In a dream world, it is to be able to continue picking and choosing projects that stand out to me and challenge me. Working with directors I look up to and alongside talented actors that push me to be better.
The music that I listen to on set really varies. When I need lots of energy and I’m dying down towards the day, I need to play hip hop or rap or else my energy just crashes after a long day. When I’m shooting something moody or where I have to play it down a bit, I’ll play Lana Del Rey or something more mellow.
I’ve had a pretty organic approach. I’m not Jessica Chastain. I’m not theatrically trained.
The first job that I booked was a small role in James Franco’s film ‘Bukowski.’ I had to make out with a 13-year-old kid. I think it was his first kiss. I was 15. I became so nervous on set that I actually fainted when James Franco came to direct me.
I don’t think any actor really thinks they’re good. I watch my own work and I’m like, Oh God, this is terrible, that’s terrible.
If I can have a career based on playing roles that are a challenge and tell an important story, and for no alternative reason, then I have succeeded.
Once you’re dating already, then you go to dinner. But I’ve never been on like a, ‘I’m getting dressed up for a date. Pick you up at 7.’
More exposure leads to more judgment and negativity.
Having my film premiere in Cannes has always been the ultimate dream for me. It is a combination of the elegance of the festival, the setting and the quality of films that premiere there.
Both my parents moved here from Argentina before I was born, so they were in a foreign country.
I don’t have one person that’s a mentor. I have so many different people that do so many different things within the industry. And they’ve all been working for so long that they give me little pieces of advice here and there.
I thought: ‘I’m going to go to college. I’m going to have a normal 9-to-5 job.’
I grew up on sets, because both my mom and dad were commercial and TV actors, so I’ve always felt very comfortable in that world.
I’m a total foodie. That’s why I work out, to balance it off.
It was very weird when my classmates were getting hundred-thousand-dollar cars because that was so not my reality.
I never leave the house without washing my hair – that’s number one!
I do a lot of Pilates on the reformer.
I think my booking ratio is 100 auditions for one job.
It’s just really so important for an actor to be in the right costume for their character.
Mickey and the Bear’ was the scariest choice I’ve made in my career because I feel pretty safe in the world of comedy and everything else, but I don’t feel safe in deep, dark, scary roles that I took on like ‘Mickey and the Bear.’
My mom loves interior design.
Being on set for me is my happiest time.