Take chances, find your voice in fashion, and find what you like, and find what makes you feel good, and do that.
I never want to be a spectacle, but I also feel like a look should always have a little bit of an edge.
I think a lot of young girls see actresses, and they think of red carpets, and they think of ‘Us Weekly,’ and they don’t really think about the breaking down of a script and what that requires and what you would need to pull it off.
It’s really important, especially for young girls, to see that if you fall down, you get back up. If you get sick, you get back up. People are going to say what they want.
Anyone who knows me knows what I’m about – how much I’m into empowerment, equal rights and everyone just loving themselves.
When I first started performing, the only community that truly got what I was trying to do was the LGBTQ community.
I only write in blue ink.
I think it’s important to have your own individual style and sense of self. It’s kind of what I do.
I think that with ‘The Vampire Diaries,’ you never know what’s going to happen, and I don’t think the characters necessarily know, either. So you can only weigh so much, and then it might just come down to ‘kill or be killed.’
I actually got a play from auditioning for something in ‘Back Stage’ magazine.
I can’t understand artists that don’t want to perform and, like, get on stage and do their songs for all their fans every night.
My style is not trendy by any means; my inner artists loves to shine through in my wardrobe.
I used to read the criticism on blogs about other people – mostly female actresses and singers – and even when they are extremely perfect and harmless, people still go after them. So I figure, if I’m going to get negativity regardless, why do I have to worry about what somebody thinks of me?
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