When I first started modelling, as I was walking down the catwalk I just thought, 'Please don't fall over, please don't fall over, please don't fall over!'
— Agyness Deyn
If you have a connection to someone, it doesn't matter what their exterior is.
A lot of stuff written about me is rubbish. I don't know where they get it from, sometimes.
I don't think a name defines the core of who you are.
I dress like a tomboy.
I've always got on with lads, more than I have with girls.
Not just in modeling, but in society, there's so much pressure about what a woman should be, and, of course, it's just so unobtainable. You can never become that thing, because it's such a projection.
Well, I suppose I've never really had a lifestyle that needs upkeep. I don't get cabs; I'm on the Tube with my Oyster card.
I'd love to have tea and scones with the Queen; she's my idol.
I've never had formal drama-school training; I've just picked things up as I've gone along.
Laughing is, like, my favorite thing to do.
I know I'm no Whitney Houston.
My mum used to always dress me and my sister in matching Laura Ashley dresses. And I'd be like, 'Mum, I just wanna wear my Doc Martens!'
Modelling is only about the look. In acting, it's the feel that matters.
I'm not the new anything; I'm just Agyness.
I think modelling was like the university of life, really. You get to travel but you get thrown into this adult world, which is kind of quite scary.
I don't expect that because I was successful in one field that I will then get a ride of passage into another.
When you're young, you say it how it is, and even your views are, like, 'This is totally the truth', 'cos you don't know any difference, so there's a real confidence in your way of thinking.
I don't really see myself as a big supermodel.
It is so inspiring when you come across a woman who is very strong and dedicated and is amazing at what they do. That's how I feel about Meryl Streep. You watch her, and you can't help but notice all of that about her. She's so influential.
Fashion isn't me, even though I work in it. It's just materialistic stuff.
I don't really go to fashion parties; they're not my scene.
I love 'Breathless,' and 'Paris, Texas,' and 'Badlands.' I was obsessed with those films in my teens. I remember watching 'Badlands' and being amazed that there were these scenes in which nobody said anything and the silence told the whole story.
I want to play positive role models - women who mean something to other women.
I don't have that many friends.
I've always been really private about my personal life. I don't talk about it.
I'd like a relationship that was like two tree trunks side by side, strong but independent.
For modelling, you have to be such a strong person in a way - or seen to be a strong person, do you know what I mean? But in acting you have to get in touch with all the vulnerability that you carry.
I never knew modelling was what I wanted to do. I was just meandering through life having fun, having a laugh with my friends.
The fact is I'm choosy, but mainly about a man's character. He has to be interesting, funny and clever. I don't even mind if he's not very good-looking.