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Sunday 16 August 2015

UN Women Goodwill Ambassador Emma Watson

British actor Emma Watson was appointed UN Women Goodwill Ambassador in July 2014. The accomplished actor, humanitarian and recent graduate of Brown University will dedicate her efforts towards the empowerment of young women and will serve as an advocate for UN Women’s HeForShe campaign in promoting gender equality.
At just 24 years of age, Emma has already been involved in the promotion of girls’ education for several years and previously visited Bangladesh and Zambia as part of her humanitarian efforts. She has worked to promote fair trade and organic clothing and served as an ambassador for Camfed International, a movement to educate girls in rural Africa.
“Being asked to serve as UN Women’s Goodwill Ambassador is truly humbling,” said Emma. “The chance to make a real difference is not an opportunity that everyone is given and is one I have no intention of taking lightly. Women’s rights are something so inextricably linked with who I am, so deeply personal and rooted in my life that I can’t imagine an opportunity more exciting. I still have so much to learn, but as I progress I hope to bring more of my individual knowledge, experience and awareness to this role.”

About Emma Watson

Emma is best known for her role as the iconic character of Hermione Granger in the globally successful “Harry Potter” films. Her performance in the first film of the series, “Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone,” won her a Young Artist Award for Best Leading Young Actor.
Since the completion of the eight-film series, Emma has shown her versatility as a performer with her first screen roles, including the 2011 Golden Globe–nominated “My Week with Marilyn” and the 2012 award-winning coming-of-age film “The Perks of Being a Wallflower,” for which Emma picked up the People’s Choice Award for Favorite Dramatic Movie Actor and Best Supporting Actor Award at the San Diego Film Critics Society Awards for her role.
Emma was most recently seen in “The Bling Ring,” the apocalypse comedy “This is the End,” and the epic biblical tale, “Noah.” Her upcoming projects include “Regression” opposite Ethan Hawke and the film adaptation of “The Queen of the Tearling.”
In 2012 Emma was honoured with the Calvin Klein Emerging Star Award at the ELLE Women in Hollywood Awards, and in 2013 she was awarded both the Trailblazer Award at the MTV Movie Awards and the GQ Woman of the Year Award.
- See more at: http://www.unwomen.org/en/partnerships/goodwill-ambassadors/emma-watson#sthash.u0xdbnF1.dpuf

‘Harry Potter’ stars say final scene was a challenge for the ages

g. 05, 2011 | 2:44 p.m.
harry potter epilogue Harry Potter stars say final scene was a challenge for the ages
"Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows -- Part 2" (Warner Bros Pictures)
No other scene in the eight “Harry Potter” films created more angst for filmmakers than the epilogue of the final movie, “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows — Part 2,” a movie that last week crossed the $1 billion mark in worldwide box office.
There were no chained dragons, hairy hippogriffs or crackling magic energies in the sequence — it’s a few minutes of quiet dialogue between parents and their children in a train station — but the anxiety of it all was so smothering that the franchise’s star, Daniel Radcliffe, at one point wanted to sit out the scene.
gallery hallows Harry Potter stars say final scene was a challenge for the ages
PHOTOS: "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows -- Part 2"
“I think they should do it with older actors and just leave us out of the scene,” Radcliffe said two years ago during a quiet moment on the stone-floor movie set where he has spent half of his working life and half of his life working. “If that’s what’s going to look best that’s what we should so. It’s too important that the ending is done right.”
(Needless to say, this is an article you shouldn’t read if you haven’t seen the film and want to remain in the dark as you walk into theaters.)
The sticky issue for Radcliffe, director David Yates and the rest of the “Potter” team was the fact that the epilogue takes place 19 years after the story’s climax at the smoldering Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. In it, Harry and his now-adult friends, Hermione and Ron, are sending off their own children to study at Hogwarts. The plan was to “age up” Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint and other young stars of the Warner Bros. franchise so they could convincingly play their elder selves.
harry potter epilogue1 Harry Potter stars say final scene was a challenge for the ages
Arthur Bowen as Albus Severus Potter and Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter (Warner Bros)
On the set in 2009, Radcliffe, still shy of 20, was leery of the plan to wear rubber fixtures on his jaw and a false hairline to age to 37. “I worry it will be a distraction,” Radcliffe said. “I don’t want people staring at our faces and getting distracted from that moment.
“If they giggle,” he added, “we’re dead.” For Radcliffe, the answer was to find adult actors to play the older roles.
gallery hermione Harry Potter stars say final scene was a challenge for the ages
PHOTOS: A decade of Emma Watson
It would be difficult for any moment in any popcorn film to bear all the weight coming down on the “Deathly Hallows” epilogue.
For all the billions of dollars the movies and books have piled up, the filmmakers also had to account for the emotional connection of, say, a 20-year-old moviegoer who has literally grown up with this vivid tale of loyalty, courage and loss.
“Potter” producer David Heyman was thinking of that when he told Radcliffe that there was no way that three “strangers” could deliver the final lines of the three main characters right before the final fade to black.
“After all we have been through with these characters, the way that a generation has grown up with them, they need to be the ones on screen when it’s time to bring it to a close,” said Heyman, who was a key decision-maker back when Radcliffe and his costars were first cast in their roles back in 2000. “There’s an expectation — even if it is not articulated — that they need to be on the screen when it’s coming to an end.”
harry potter epilogue2 Harry Potter stars say final scene was a challenge for the ages
Helena Barlow as Rose Weasley, Emma Watson as Hermione Granger, Rupert Grint as Ron Weasley and Ryan Turner as Hugo Weasley (Warner Bros)
The scene was finally filmed last May at King’s Cross Station in London. A few weeks later, Radcliffe was happy to say that he believed the challenge had truly been met. The relief in his voice was clear even in the trans-Atlantic phone call from London.
“The thing we didn’t want was for it to be distracting and I think we figured it out,” Radcliffe said. “We did it with prosthetics, in the end, and I’m sure there will be little bits of visual effects for retouching on those moments when we do a close-up… when you have the prosthetic on for a long time, it’s hard to maintain it, that illusion, and with close-ups you need to fix it up. It’s also a challenge to make someone who is 19 or 20 — an age where their face is still changing — and make them a fully grown adult. I think they looked fantastic though and, if I do say so, particularly mine. Mine looked pretty dead on. That’s me in the future I think.”
gallery hogwarts Harry Potter stars say final scene was a challenge for the ages
PHOTOS: Hogwarts professors through the years
Not everyone agreed.
Some images of the made-up trio leaked to the Web and some fans thought Radcliffe’s visage had gone too far into Old Man Potter territory and he looked more like a 48-year-old Harry S Truman than a wizard still shy of middle age. Many thought that Watson didn’t look especially different as Hermione of the future, others couldn’t stop staring at Grint’s aged-up Ron and his considerable expanse of forehead.
“The images of me still haunt me,” Grint told MTV later. “It was like this monster Donald Trump kind of mixture. It was scary.”
This week, reached in Italy on vacation, Heyman moaned when asked about that day at King’s Cross.
harry potter epilogue3 Harry Potter stars say final scene was a challenge for the ages
"Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows -- Part 2"
“Rupert looked like he was about 75 years old with the triple chin and the belly, he looked like he had really lived as a lush,” Heyman said. “We knew we needed to rework the makeup.  There was another problem, too, shooting at the train station proved quite challenging for some of the younger kids who played the children of Harry, Ron and Hermione. It was really noisy every few minutes a train from Liverpool would pull in on one of the other tracks. We only had our one track closed.”
Yates went back to footage afterward but no clever edit or CG tune-up was going to elevate it enough. So, in December, long after the movie had wrapped, Yates and the producers summoned their young stars back to Leavesden Studios for a second, salvaging effort.
gallery harry Harry Potter stars say final scene was a challenge for the ages
PHOTOS: A decade of Dan Radcliffe
With New Year’s Eve approaching, time was running out. If the “Potter” team needed an ominous reminder of what could go wrong all they had to do was look at Disney’s big holiday-season release, “Tron: Legacy,” with its dead-faced, digital “de-aging” of Jeff Bridges. The “Potter” team decided to go with less tech and more of a classic makeup approach, but Rick Baker, the seven-time Oscar winner in the field, says that approach is hardly perfect.
“There’s nothing harder than the human face because we all spend so much time looking at them,” said Baker, who has admired the “Potter” franchise from a distance. “You can create creatures and aliens and all of those things but people judge human faces in a different way. Especially if it’s a human face they recognize because it’s already famous.”
“Post-graduate work,” was the director’s playful reference to bringing the Hogwarts alumni back to the soundstages. The epilogue was re-shot and director Yates, reflecting on it during a Los Angeles visit last month, said it was “the right thing to do at that point” despite the expense, inconvenience and murmurs of negativity in the press.
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A scene from "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows -- Part 2." (Warner Bros. Pictures)
The makeup team for “Deathly Hallows” was led by Nick Dudman and, to Heyman, the second shot on the “age-up” work was a home run.
“It made all the difference in the world,” Heyman said. “We got what we were looking for. There was a challenge in the performance for the young actors. I know Emma talked about her approach was to think of her young siblings — her father has remarried and she has a new family — and how being with them was her way to get into the head of a parent going off to school. It wasn’t easy for them.”
gallery ron Harry Potter stars say final scene was a challenge for the ages
Photos: Rupert Grint as Ron
Heyman has said the hushed control of the Leavesden soundstages provided “the place to get the needed intimacy” but the timing also created the unexpected benefit of making the epilogue the “true” last scene made by the young stars. Film scenes are rarely shot in the same order they are shown on-screen but in this instance the farewell feeling brought an evocative gravity to the day.
“We should have thought to film it last in the first place,” Heyman said Wednesday. “It created a reality of sorts to the feelings in the scene and in the air. And I think now we’ve heard from the rest of the world that it worked. In the end, we used some shots from King’s Cross, too, to make a hybrid. There was a little bit of CG as well. The combination is subtle, which it needed to be.”
gallery kids Harry Potter stars say final scene was a challenge for the ages
Photos: Past 'Potter' premieres
So just as the saga ends not with a bang but with a steam train’s whisper, the epilogue isn’t the most visually dynamic achievement in “Potter” history but it was one of the most hard-won. And for Heyman, looking on the faces of his young stars and seeing so much artificial age added, it was a surreal send-off to a decade of wonder.
“It was something very strange and affecting,” the producer said. “I was really pleased because I thought there was a real tenderness about the last scene, a feeling of closure and the cycles of life. There’s a new beginning and there’s an ending. There are different sorts of adventures for these actors and for all of us. But we made it to the train station together.”

50 Things You Probably Didn't Know about Emma Watson

Emma Watson is best known for playing the character of Hermione, the best friend of Harry Potter in the Harry Potter film franchise 
  1. Her full name is Emma Charlotte Duerre Watson.
  2. Emma is of British and Turkish descendant.
  3. Despite being British, she was actually born in Paris, France on April 15, 1990.
    Source: Wikipedia
    Source: Wikipedia
  4. Her parents, both British lawyers, are Jacqueline Luesby and Chris Watson.
  5. Her parents divorced when Watson was 5, and she moved back to Oxfordshire in England with her mother and brother.
  6. Emma has a younger brother Alexander, half brother from her biological father that is named Toby, and half twin sisters also from her father that are called Nina and Lucy.
  7. Watson attended the Stagecoach Theatre Arts school at Oxford. She studied singing, acting and dancing, and performed in school plays.
    Source: Stagecoach Theatre Arts school
    Source: Stagecoach Theatre Arts school
  8. Emma plays field hockey, tennis, rounders and netball. She also dances in several different styles, like break dancing and modern, and likes to take art classes.
  9. Her favorite school subjects are art, history and English. Her least favorites are math and geography.
    Source: Pixabay
    Source: Pixaba
  10. Watson had never acted professionally when her theater teachers suggested her to agents looking to cast an upcoming movie based on the first novel of the best-selling Harry Potter series.
  11. She auditioned eight times for the role of Hermoine Granger which catapulted her to international fame.
    Source: Wikipedia
    Source: Wikipedi
  12. Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling wanted Watson for the role of Hermoine from her first screen test.
    Source: Wikipedia
    Source: Wikipedia
  13. She was 11 years old when the first movie Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone was released in November 2001. s. It grossed more than $974 million worldwide. On opening day in the United States, the film made a record-breaking $33.3 million.
    Source: Tumblr
    Source: Tumblr
  14. She is best friends with Harry Potter co-stars Daniel Radcliffe and Rupert Grint after practically growing up with them on the Harry Potter set. She calls them her 'brothers'.
  15. At the age of 12, she had a crush on her Harry Potter co-star Tom Felton, who plays Draco Malfoy.
    Source: Wikipedia
    Source: Wikipedia
  16. She was falsely reported to have broken her wrist during the filming of "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets" (2002).
  17. For the next decade Watson stayed busy filming the Potter series.
  18. Emma thinks of her character Hermione Granger as a potential role model for young girls and as a female action hero who "rocks."
    Source: Flickr
    Source: Flickr
  19. Emma has said she thinks the chances are slim that she will ever be involved in another project that is as successful as "Harry Potter."
  20. Her favourite book from the Harry Potter saga is Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.
    Source: Wikipedia
    Source: Wikipedia
  21. Emma had to wait until she was fifteen before she was allowed to have her ears pierced.
  22. In 2004 Emma joined Pierce Brosnan, Kenneth Branagh, and Samantha Morton to serve as a jury to select the teenaged film-makers' "First Light Film Awards" ceremony held in London's Leicester Square.
  23. Emma wore braces for four months in 2005, saying it's important because a smile is for life.
    Source: Wikipedia
    Source: Wikipedia
  24. In 2007, Forbes Magazine estimated her earnings for the year at $4 million. At the time she was 17 years old. She was also named the 'Highest Grossing Actress of the Decade' by the Guiness Book of World Records. Her film work in the past decade has grossed over 5.4 billion dollars worldwide.
  25. In 2005. When she was 15, she was the youngest person to be featured on Teen Vogue Magazine.
  26. Emma lent her voice to Princess Pea for the animated movie The Tale of Desperaux in 2008.
    She passed her driving test on her first attempt, January 28, 2008.
  27. Despite spending her adolescence on film sets, she had five hours of tutoring each day. She graduated with high grades.
    Source: Flickr
    Source: Flickr
  28. She can speak some french.
  29. She is 5'5 tall.
    Source: Wikicommons
    Source: Wikicommons
  30. Watson has tried hard to shed her child star image, one that's so closely tied to the Potter franchise. "I have lived in a complete bubble. They found me and picked me for the part. And now I'm desperately trying to find my way through it," she said in an interview with Vogue.
  31. She consistently tops best dressed lists. "I love fashion. I think it's so important, because it's how you show yourself to the world," said Watson.
    Emma was chosen as the face of Burberry's Autumn/Winter 2009 collection, and again for the 2010 Spring/Summer collection.
  32. Source: Flickr
    Source: Flickr
  33. In 2010, she shocked fans by debuting a cute pixie haircut. The hairdo did make her look more grownup.
    Source: Tumblr
    Source: Tumblr
  34. She graced the cover of Vogue in July 2011.
    Source: Tumblr
    Source: Tumblr
  35. Emma enrolled at Brown University in 2009, an Ivy League US university where she studied Literature.
    Source: Wikipedia
    Source: Wikipedia
  36. When she was asked why she chose a US higher education institution and not a British one, she said its because the American system allows students to study many subjects at once.
  37. One of her favorite actors is Johnny Depp.
    Source: Wikipedia
    Source: Wikipedia
  38. Watson starred in The Perks of Being a Wallflower (2012).

  39. Emma is a cat lover. She has two cats named Bubbles and Domino.
    Source: Wikipedia
    Source: Wikipedia
  40. She is a huge fan of Julia Roberts.
    Source: Flickr
    Source: Flickr
  41. Emma admires Natalie Portman and Renee Zellweger for their willingness to take on challenging roles in film, even if they are not typically beautiful characters.
    Source: Wikipedia
    Source: Wikipedia
  42. Her favorite color is light blue.
  43. She proudly proclaims herself to be a feminist, as well as fairly competitive.
  44. Emma was ranked #69 on Maxim magazine's Hot 100 of 2011 list.
    Source: Wikipedia
    Source: Wikipedia
  45. Her favorite movie is Notting Hill (1999). Her favorite television show is "Friends" (1994).

  46. Her favorite singers are Alanis Morrisette and Justin Timberlake.
    Source: Wikipedia
    Source: Wikipedia
  47. Her nickname is Em.
  48. Emma Waston's net worth is $60 million.
  49. Her favourite author is Carlos Ruis Zafon and she loved "The Shadow of the Wind" and its prequel "The Game of the Angel".
    Source: Wikicommons

'My Hair Was So Bad': Emma Watson Thanks Fans For 'Support During Awkward Harry Potter Moments At MTV Movie Awards

Emma Watson has come along way since her pre-teen days as child star Hermione Granger in the wizard drama Harry Potter, blossoming right before our eyes into a elegant young woman, and it seems that Americans are just as blown over by the British actress if the recent MTV Movie Awards was anything to go by.
Emma seemed to be the girl of the moment as fellow actors heaped prasied on the brunette beauty, who scooped the Trailblazer gong on Sunday.
Emma Watson looked stunning at the MTV Movie Awards (WENN)
My Week With Marilyn co-star Eddie Redmayne called her "as irritatingly elegant and kind as she is talented Perks of Being a Wallflower".  While co-star Logan Lerman described her as "present and so giving in every scene."
Meanwhile, Jonah Jonas took the opportunity via video message to poke fun at the 23-year-old, joking that the two would be teaming up as the lead characters of Fifty Shade of Grey.
Despite her popularity, Emma gave a modest acceptance speech after landing her gong where she admitted she has had plenty of awkward moments on her road to fame.
We think Emma's curl's were adorable in Harry Potter (WENN)
"You guys are going to make me cry - that was so nice!" she gushed.
"So after seeing this clip, I look back over the work I've done in the last 14 years and many things come to mind - most importantly, how bad my hair was in the first 'Harry Potter' film!"
The actress went on to thank her fans and the audience for "supporting me through all of my awkwardness."
"Becoming yourself is really hard and confusing, and it's a process. I was completely the eager beaver in school, I was the girl in the front of the class who was the first person to put her hand up, and it's often not cool to be the person that puts themself out there," Emma continued.
"I've often gotten teased mercilessly, but I found that ultimately if you truly pour your heart into what you believe in - even if it makes you vulnerable - amazing things can and will happen."
We actually thought you looked adorable in Harry Potter, Emma.

Emma Watson Recalls ‘Awkwardness,’ Hermione Granger With MTV Trailblazer Award

Accio achievement! For the second year in a row, the MTV
Trailblazer Award has highlighted an outstanding young talent in the biz. The big honoree at thehref="http://www.mtv.com/ontv/movieawards/2013/">2013 MTV Movie Awards was the wholly deserving Emma Watson.
As proof that Watson isn’t just beloved by her fans, she received not one, not even two, but three introductions by fellow actors. First, her “My Week With Marilyn” co-star Eddie Redmayne called her “as irritatingly elegant and kind as she is talented.” Then her “Perks of Being a Wallflower” co-star Logan Lerman sang her praises, describing her as “present and so giving in every scene.” Last, via video message, Jonah Hill appeared to announce that they’d be teaming up as the two lead characters in “Fifty Shades of Grey,” poking fun at Watson’s recent target="_blank">Twitterreaction to rumors that she was in talks to star in the big-screen adaptation of E L James’ novel.
Laughing good-naturedly at the joke, Watson ascended the stage. The once fresh-faced preteen star has grown into an elegant, composed 22-year-old young woman. Sporting a short bubble-skirted dress with black and white accents with her hair swept back in a chic side-parted low bun, Watson commanded the stage with modesty and poise, breathlessly exclaiming, “You guys are going to make me cry — that was so nice!”
In reaction to the tribute reel played prior to her introduction, she joked, “So after seeing this clip, I look back over the work I’ve done in the last 14 years and many things come to mind — most importantly, how bad my hair was in the first ’Harry Potter’ film!”
She thanked fans for “supporting me through all of my awkwardness” and went on to compare herself to her beloved character Hermione Granger, saying, “Becoming yourself is really hard and confusing, and it’s a process. I was completely the eager beaver in school, I was the girl in the front of the class who was the first person to put her hand up, and it’s often not cool to be the person that puts themself out there, and I’ve often gotten teased mercilessly, but I found that ultimately if you truly pour your heart into what you believe in — even if it makes you vulnerable — amazing things can and will happen.”
She closed by promising to “make the best work I can for all of you”
as the enthusiastic crowd cheered her on.
Since her formidable stint at Hogwarts, Watson hasn’t slowed down.
She’s proved she can break out of straight-laced Hermione’s mold after eight “Harry Potter” films to play a diverse roster of characters, including tenacious wardrobe assistant Lucy in “My Week With Marilyn,”
wise-beyond-her-years Sam in “The Perks of Being a Wallflower,” and, in perhaps her most daring role yet, fame-obsessed teen thief Nicki in Sofia Coppola’s upcoming film “The Bling Ring.”

Emma Watson Talks Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1

Last week, ComingSoon.net was in London for the junket for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1, and you would think that Harry Potter was a secondary character considering how many newspapers featured pictures of Emma Watson on their covers from the premiere the night before.
Yeah, Ms. Watson is getting the kind of attention you’d expect if “Hermione Granger” was the name in the title, and a lot of that has to do with the relationship between her, Daniel Radcliffe’s Harry and Rupert Grint’s Ron, one that has her in scenes kissing both of her long time co-stars as the trio goes on the run from the Death Eaters while trying to find and destroy the Horcruxes that hold the pieces of Voldemort’s soul.
As we finished speaking with Rupert Grint, Watson snuck up behind him and seeing the two of them together in person, you could see that she’s really quite tiny, looking even smaller with her newish pixie haircut. Our roundtable interview started with the question apparently on everyone’s minds…
Q: Of course, we have to start with the kiss.
Emma Watson: Of course! (laughs) What else should we start with? What do you want to know?
Q: I heard it was a closed set and they kicked Rupert off of it.
Watson: They did, yes. It was a closed set, and it was awkward enough without having tons of people come and watch.
Q: Was it a strange experience? I heard they tried different amounts of smoke and you had silver body paint on.
Watson: Oh, it was the weirdest thing ever, and they only told us about the silver body paint the day before. They were like, “Oh, and P.S., we hope you don’t mind but we’d like you both to be topless and covered in silver paint.” I was like, “Ookay,” if it wasn’t weird enough before. (laughs) So yeah, it was bizarre. Luckily, Dan is very funny and talkative and we could just have a laugh about it. Kissing Rupert, he’s slightly more quiet so I was like, “Oh, God, what’s he thinking?” Whereas the whole time with Dan I knew EXACTLY what he was thinking, so that helped.
Q: He did say that he thought you were ferocious about it.
Watson: I keep hearing this, and I don’t know what to say. Danny even called me “an animal,” so yeah, I guess I was just so worried about it coming across as awkward as I felt it was inside that I just wanted to make it as real as I could? So I guess I just went for it?
Q: What’s the experience like being away from Hogwarts for this particular film? Was it a very different experience?
Watson: Definitely. It felt like we were making a different movie, which was so nice. It meant it didn’t get boring after making six of them. It’s nice to have something a bit fresh.
Q: The fact that the three of you have made eight movies together in ten years and worked together for so long, how hard is it to keep things fresh?
Watson: That is definitely the hardest thing. The cool thing about this movie is that because we shot two back-to-back, there was this momentum that we picked up and there was this kind of chaos to flitting back and forth between two different movies, and we were trying to get so much done that we didn’t have any option than to be fast and be on top of it. The pace picked up a notch, which really helped us as actors, because when it’s that slow, it’s very hard to give a fresh performance. When you’ve sat in the trailer for three hours, it’s tough.
Q: I heard that you had more time to make the movie so if you had a tougher scene, you’d have more time and could do another take the next day.
Watson: It’s wonderful that on “Potter,” we had that kind of flexibility. Pretty much, such a huge part of the filming was done at Leavesden, so it wasn’t like, “Okay, guys, we won’t be at the set tomorrow. We have to get this done.” Those sets were around, so we did have the option to get it right. That was a luxury I guess.
Q: There are a lot of nice subtle moments in your performance. Was there more opportunity to have more freedom on how you express yourself?
Watson: Definitely, and I just had such a bigger role. It gave me such a better chance to really develop it and get into it, and I just felt like I had so much more room to give it a bit more. I had some really challenging stuff to do, which gave me a chance to show what I can do, which was lovely as well.
Q: Can you talk about working with David Yates and tackling some of that more challenging material? 
Watson: He was very good. He’s very calm, which is great for me, because there are days when I just panicked, I mean really just… “David, I don’t know how to do this!” I didn’t know how to act… I’ve never been tortured before, I have no idea how to pull that off. I have no idea what it feels like to see your friend bleeding to death in your arms. There was some really hard stuff to do, like what it’s like to erase your parents’ memories and walk out the door. I think for me, I have quite an academic, like a heady approach I guess to the way that I act, and us just talking through what it meant, what does it mean for her? How does it relate to her past? What does she think about this? Having the time to be very clear in my head about what exactly everything was allowed me to give a really good performance. He’s very patient, which is so nice. I never felt like I was being hurried, so that was nice. He’s very good like that, he’s very gentle.
Q: We’ve talked to others about the first film and how it was for Chris Columbus to direct kids. Can you talk about evolving into more of an acting approach and some of the lessons you’ve learned from all the great directors who’ve stepped in and specific things you picked up along the way? 
Watson: Well, it’s interesting. I think working with different directors have signaled different… Alfonso wasn’t going to do any of the “kiddie directing” stuff. He was like, “Get up there and do it.” He didn’t have much patience for “Eyes wide, look terrified!” He wasn’t going to do any of that, so he made us step up and then Mike Newell again, and then David Yates. It worked like that I think.
Q: David mentioned the scene with your parents and that more was filmed that didn’t make it into the movie.
Watson: Oh, yeah, it got cut. Well, it wasn’t actually with me in the scene. It was just with them having a conversation about what they were watching on TV, but it wasn’t anything that I was in.
Q: Over the course of the 8 movies, you’ve worked with some amazing actors like Alan Rickman, Robbie Coltrane and Michael Gambon. Was there anyone you realized when you weren’t going to do any more scenes with them that got you upset and that you miss working with them? 
Watson: A lot of them. I miss working with Emma Thompson, she was a real fave. She’s lovely and very interesting and I got on really well with her.
Q: Are you acclimatized to life post-Potter?
Watson: I go through periods where it feels fine, easy, and I’m busy at school, and there are days when I feel really lost, because it was just so structured and I had people telling me where I needed to be, what they wanted me to do. My whole life was on a schedule, on a call sheet, every day, and being at university, you decide when you eat, where you go, if you work, if you don’t. No one cares and it’s all down to you, so yeah, I had days where I feel “Oof” but it was always going to be an adjustment and I feel lucky that I kept going with school and that I have that kind of infrastructure to fall back on. I dunno. It feels nice to be able to take a bit of a break. I don’t know how Dan’s doing it to be honest, because making these two films back to back was exhausting, I mean really exhausting. I was hanging in rags when we finished shooting, so I don’t know how Dan is doing it. He’s kind of amazingly energetic.
Q: Have you hung out at all with Daniel or Rupert since you finished filming? Do you expect to get together for lunches or anything like that? 
Watson: We always have these dates when we know we’re going to see each other again, so yeah, I guess when the last movie is out… I know that Dan is doing something on Broadway in New York, so I guess we’ll hang out when we’re both in New York together, and maybe I’ll show up at Rupert’s doorstep one day. I’m dying to go to his house, it sounds amazing. So yeah, we’ll figure it out but at least we’ll have these dates where we know we’ll be together again.
Q: Can you talk about the dancing scene between you and Daniel in the tent? I understood it’s splitting people. Can you talk about the subtext and if you thought this was just a moment between friends or if it was something else?
Watson: The way that Dan and I played it was there was the possibility there could be something else between Hermione and Harry. If you spend that period of time with one person alone on the road and you don’t know when you’re going to see anyone else again, I dunno, I feel like maybe there could have been something there, but not really from Hermione’s end. I think whether or not you like that storyline or not, the scene has a tension but it’s open to interpretation. It’s not fixed.
Q: What about the torture scene with Helena? How did you deal with that? Did you dig in deep for it?
Watson: Yes, I definitely did, it was quite horrible to do, but it was a real challenge and I enjoyed having the challenge and I had that demanding thing to do. I think as Bellatrix, (Helena’s) just terrifying because she looks so unhinged, she looks so crazy, but I don’t think she actually enjoyed doing it. I guess it showed that I was doing a good job that she felt uncomfortable.
Q: Over the course of this decade, have you been surprised at all by the increased acting depth that your coworkers have achieved as well as maybe your own? 
Watson: Oh, all the time, particularly in Part 2, there’s a scene where Rupert’s brother dies and the amazing thing about Rupert is that he’s a very self-contained human being. It’s very rare that you see him get emotional. The minute the camera rolls, he just becomes this other thing and he has so much, and I’m like, “Where does that come from?” Anyway, there’s a scene where he cries and I remember having to remind myself to keep acting because I just wanted to go, “You’re amazing! That was amazing!” I don’t know where he pulled it from, and I’ve had moments exactly the same with Dan where I’ve just been amazed, I mean particularly with a lot of the stunt work Dan’s had to do in the last movie. He’s fearless and he’ll just launch himself off a building, all this stuff, and I’m just gobsmacked that he just gives it everything, and it’s really admirable, definitely.
Q: You’ve been doing these movies since you were nine years old, and I don’t know what your expectations were at that time, but now, everyone who sees you in these last three movies says, “Of course, she’s going to continue being an actress” but you’re also going to school for something different. What are your feelings on that? When you finish the semester, do you expect to have something to do acting-wise?
Watson: I want to be a Renaissance woman. I want to be good at lots of different things. I thrive on variety. I just love doing things that are new. It’s really exhausting when people are like, “You’re giving up. It sounds like you’re never going to act again.” No, it’s not like that. I just really want to finish my education, and I’m just taking it slow, you know? I’m just not like diving into anything. I’m just taking care of feeling out my options and making sure that whatever I do next is going to be the right thing. I just did a small movie called “My Week with Marilyn,” which is a Weinstein production with Eddie Redmayne, Michelle Williams. It was only a couple days shooting, but it went really well, so yeah, I’m just trying to find the right (things).
Q: Having done all these films that there are still things with performance and acting that you’d like to learn even though you had this spectrum of experiences? 
Watson: I’m lucky because I have to say I have experience, like hands-on experience. I really know the way that film sets work, film crews, special FX. I’ve had so much experience, but I would definitely love to learn more about how to approach the work before I step onto the set. Definitely. I feel like I worked out my method on this last movie, but I would love to really try a few different kinds of things to give me a bit more variety and flexibility. Yeah, I’m definitely going to do that.
Q: You haven’t done any accents yet, so are you looking for anything that will allow you to do an accent? 
Watson: I’m working on accents actually. For “My Week with Marilyn,” I do a lower-class English accent, and I’ve been working on an American accent, so yeah, I think being able to have that is so important after playing the same person over and over again. I think that’s Meryl Streep’s biggest strength and Cate Blanchett, all these amazing actresses and it’s definitely something I’m working on.
Q: How do you think people will react the first time they hear your American accent?
Watson: I don’t know. It will be interesting I think. I have no idea how people will respond. I’ll have to see if they’re able to deal with it or not.
Q: Your character is quite an inspiration for girls and having started acting very young, when did you become aware of that fact and if that affected you at all and how you handled it?
Watson: I have younger siblings, and not with Harry Potter but with other movies that they watched, they watch them over and over and over again to the point where they will say the dialogue with the character in the movie. I was watching my little sister do this. I was like “I wonder if kids do this with Harry Potter? I wonder if kids literally impersonate what I do?” And when I realized that, I was like “That’s interesting. This is a big deal.” (laughs) So yeah, I definitely had a moment where I realized that she was very fortunate.
Q: Can you talk a little bit about filming the epilogue?
Watson: Sure, that was definitely a challenge; there’s so many challenges in these last two. Pretending that I had kids and acting as if they were my children was the weirdest thing, that I had children. So weird. That was a struggle. I was like, “Am I doing this right? How do I…?” It was hard to know how to approach it, so I hope it looks good in the end. Prosthetics are horrible. I’m never… I’m going to avoid doing a movie with prosthetics, like my life depends on it. I’m glad I had like a taste of that experience, enough to know it’s miserable. (laughs) It was obvious for me.
Q: When Chris Columbus cast you guys, he got it so wonderfully right, and does it ever strike you as being such an unlikely and amazing thing? 
Watson: It does, yeah. Someone said to me the other day, “What if one of you had gotten really fat?” or like “What if you had just not been good anymore?” or I dunno, and I was like, “Hm…” I never considered that possibility. We just always… I dunno. Anything could have happened, but we seem to have come through pretty well, I don’t know. We seem fine. So yeah, it does seem unlikely that being cast at age 9, we’d still be right for the roles now, ten years later, I think it’s remarkable, a pretty awesome piece of casting.
Q: Is there a specific experience or part of the series you filmed that will always stick with you as the best time you ever had and on the flip side, is there one that is the absolute worst?
Watson: Yes, I can tell you the worst right now. It was on movie #2, we get dropped by a dragon into the lake and I think it was January or February. The lake wasn’t heated, and because we had to get changed as part of the next scene, we couldn’t wear anything underneath. I was lucky. I had my bottom half with some thermals on, but I was like, “This must be a joke.” It was so cold. I think Rupert thought at one point that his heart had stopped beating. I hate being cold more than anything, so that was my most memorable day. I was like, “I can’t wait for this to be over!” We spent pretty much the whole of part 2 soaking wet, and Leavesden – I’m sure it’ll be beautifully redone when Warners invests all this money in it, but that day, it was not heated. Anyway, I’ll stop complaining. (laughs) My favorite, my best moment… you know what? The first movie, even though it was ten years ago and I was really young, I just remember the wide-eyed excitement and awe I just came into Leavesden everyday, just to be so excited about what I was going to see next. Every time I walked onto a new set or someone new did something new, it was all just so overwhelmingly exciting. It just went by like this (snaps fingers) doing that movie. I have some really fond silly memories from that.
Q: What are your thoughts on J.K. Rowling possibly revisiting Potter ten years down the road?
Watson: I have heard about this. I’m still trying to come to terms with putting this to bed, so being asked to try to think about whether I would consider doing another series is… I can’t think about it, I dunno. I never say never. I think maybe playing her for ten years is maybe enough, but never say never so, so I dunno.
 
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