I think any actor worth their salt wants to show as much versatility as they possibly can.
I don't want anyone to ever say that I don't belong where I am.
Ironing boards are a classic example of something I find horrible about modern society: the excitementation, for want of a better word, of mundane things.
I like the idea of not having to do stuff for the money, and if I want to, I can pick indie projects for the rest of my life and be quite happy doing that.
Because I'm short and slim, I can identify with somebody who's an unlikely fit for something and desperately wants to be part of it.
I want to prove to people that I'm an actor and not just a character.
You pick projects for the part, the director, and the script. I just want to do different, interesting stuff.
You never want to be forced to do something. But the world around you starts to influence you in ways you never expected.
I'm the only kid in the world who doesn't want an eighth Harry Potter book.
As an artist, you have a path that you're on that evolves with the kinds of stories you want to tell.
I don't want to say I'll never play someone with a cockney accent, but I think I would be irritated by me doing it.
The stories I'm interested in are challenging ones, and maybe that requires a little bit more of you. I love my job and I want to earn the right to do it every single day.
I certainly want to establish myself as an actor in my own right, rather than being just the actor who plays Harry Potter.
I still have issues around forgetting that it's my life and if I want to do something, I can do it.