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When you're growing up, you play dress-up - it's a game, it's a pastime. And then as you get older, getting ready and looking nice becomes this constant stress. I want to make it fun again.
The short hair fits my personality more. I think maybe, with long hair, it was a role - I was playing dress-up a bit.
I like playing dress-up, and I love pretty jewels, but for me, being a 'movie star' would be a very dangerous place.
As a little girl I loved the thought of playing dress-up and getting ready.
I think clothing is transformative. When you put something really beautiful on, you feel something. In so many ways, we're always playing a form of dress-up - it's just a grown-up, much chicer version of it. It's nice to be able to be whoever you want to be.
I was a bit of a show-off in school and loved playing dress-up, and my passion for it just grew as I got older.
The aesthetic came along the way, I think - just through experimenting, and going on tour, and trying stuff out on stage, having fun with it, and not taking it too seriously. If I had a ballgown at home, I'd wear it onstage. If I found something in a charity shop, I'd wear it. That's where it grew from - just wanting to play dress-up.
I used to love to play dress-up, where you get your mother's or your grandmother's dresses and high heels.
My whole philosophy is about playing dress-up.
I actually have a stash of wigs for Halloween. But only for that. Not to play dress-up.