| | | | Sienna Miller News & Gossip
|
| Sienna Miller feels 'fully vindicated' after settling with News Group Newspapers | Added 3 years ago | Source: CeleBitchy |
|
|
|
|
|
Rupert Murdoch and Fleet Street wanted people to believe that the end of the Leveson Inquiry was the end of journalists? phone-hacking and unethical/illegal dealings for information. The Leveson Inquiry was not the end though many of the British media?s victims kept fighting and fighting, through years of legal back-and-forth and lawsuits and threats and millions of dollars in legal fees. This week, News Group Newspapers (Murdoch?s outfit) settled with several high-profile victims, including Sienna Miller. From 2003-2006, Sienna was the British It Girl and she sold a lot of papers. Many of those stories were based on hacking her phone, paying off people in her doctor?s office for information, and paying off some of her friends to spy on her. Sienna has been one of the ?faces? of the phone-hacking scandal for years, and this week, she got a substantial settlement.
Actor Sienna Miller on Thursday accepted ?substantial? damages from the publisher of British tabloid newspaper The Sun, which she accuses of hacking her phone and leaking news of her pregnancy. Miller joins a list of dozens of people who have received payments from News Group Newspapers over illegal eavesdropping that took place over a decade ago.
News Group Newspapers has paid millions of pounds to settle lawsuits from hacking victims. Most of the cases have involved the now-defunct News of the World, which was shut down by owner Rupert Murdoch in 2011 after revelations that its employees had snooped on the voice mails of celebrities, politicians and even crime victims in search of scoops. News Group Newspapers has acknowledged hacking by the News of the World, but not by The Sun, which continues to operate.
Nonetheless Miller, 39, said she felt ?fully vindicated? after the publisher agreed to pay her undisclosed ?substantial damages without admitting liability. Outside court, Miller said journalists and management at the newspaper ?very nearly ruined my life. I have certainly seen how they have ruined the lives of others.?
?Their behavior shattered me, damaged my reputation ? at times beyond repair and caused me to accuse my family and friends of selling information that catapulted me into a state of intense paranoia and fear, said Miller, who was a British tabloid fixture during her relationship with fellow actor Jude Law in the early 2000s. Miller?s lawyer, David Sherborne, said the payment was ?tantamount to an admission of liability? by The Sun. The lawyer said Miller ?was the subject of intense media scrutiny and serious intrusion into her private life from around 2003. In particular, The Sun published numerous intrusive stories about her that contained intimate private details about her relationships and feelings and even her confidential medical information.?
He said Miller accused the then editor of The Sun, Rebekah Brooks, and others of leaking the news of her pregnancy, a leak that had ?led her to being unable to trust those closest to her when she really needed them.?
[From ABC News]
Sienna and her lawyer did a press conference outside the courthouse where they accepted the settlement, which I sincerely hope was eight figures. Sienna told the reporters there that she didn?t really want to settle, that she hoped to continue pushing News Group Newspapers to trial, but that it would have taken years and millions of dollars to pursue this further. She said she hoped someone with more money could take these fkers to trial. A lot of people were like: Enter Prince Harry. Harry is still part of the group of hacking victims who are still suing Murdoch?s outfit and pushing for a trial.
Actress Sienna Miller claimed The Sun newspaper tried to 'profit from her misery' and 'brutally took away her choice' by allegedly leaking that she was pregnant.
Read more here: https://t.co/CJIAGnsDVI pic.twitter.com/wqbOWbEXPg
Sky News (@SkyNews) December 9, 2021
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
| Sienna Miller on herself & Britney Spears: 'Everyone in the culture was complicit' | Added 3 years ago | Source: CeleBitchy |
|
|
|
|
|
Sienna Miller is still promoting Wander Darkly, a drama with a plot which is very hard to describe. So hard to describe, Sienna still hasn?t figured out a two-sentence teaser for it, so I know I can?t do it either. This was the film Sienna was promoting with her Daily Beast interview, where she chatted about the old days of Jude Law and It Girl-ness, but glossed over the Rhys Ifans and Balthazar Getty years, which (imo) were just as formative, gossip-wise, as the Jude years. Sienna chats here with the Guardian, and there are more references to the whole craziness of 2003-2008. She talks about the Leveson Inquiry, suing the British tabloids and negotiating like a man:
Watching Framing Britney Spears. ?Everyone in the culture was complicit in what was being done to girls in that moment. I was definitely a victim of that, and I couldn?t handle it. I don?t know how anyone could. It was assault. And I think the reaction from a lot of women under that kind of scrutiny at the time was to just lose it a little bit. You?re in a perpetual state of anxiety. You?re living this video-game existence, being hunted relentlessly. Watching the documentary, I could really relate to those moments where she cracks because it?s unmanageable. It is aggressive and terrifying and you lose control. That?s their intention.?
She could have adapted her behavior: ?I could have not gone out. Or not worn what I wanted. I could have changed my life in some way. I just took them all to court instead.?
She takes credit for inventing boho chic?? ?You probably have Ugg boots, disc belts and peasant tops in your cupboard without knowing why. And you?re welcome. [Fans] say: ?I love your style!? And I think: ?What about my films???
Her performance in Factory Girl. ?I think my performance was appreciated, but the noise of everything else was louder. It was, like: ?She can?t possibly be good and be doing all these other things.?
On Wander Darkly: ?It felt really clunky to make, and it took a lot of persuasion from the director to reassure us that this was not an absolute disaster. I felt lost, which served my character?s state of mind. I was hoping for a miracle in the edit. There was a crew member outside with a hosepipe spraying the water into the garage. I was barefoot, and the director was saying: ?This will turn into the sea.? And I was just looking at this man with a hose, and saying to myself: ?There is no way, with the budget we have, that this is going to work.? It required so much trust, and I did waver. I should?ve relaxed more.?
On paychecks: ?I can tell you that Diego [Luna, her Wander Darkly costar] and I basically got nothing. With an independent film, you?re not doing it for the pay cheque.? Studios are another story. ?When a studio is involved and it?s a demanding schedule and you know you?ll be leaned on heavily in the press tour, then I do believe that women should be compensated more than they have been in the past. I never really advocated for that before because I was always so fking grateful to be working.?
On Chadwick Boseman fighting for her to paid properly: ?His act of generosity was incredibly validating. It was a total anomaly in Hollywood for someone to behave that way. But it was also very true to who the man was.?
Negotiate like a man: ?I spoke to my agents and my lawyer, who are all women, and I said: ?OK, I?m going to go in and negotiate as if I?m a man.? I had to get myself into the mindset of being male to even have those discussions. That?s another product of the patriarchy we?ve grown up in. It?s depressing that we accepted that, along with all the advances and the misogyny. We took it because that?s what we were raised in. But the world is changing.?
[From The Guardian]
I absolutely had a flashback to when Sienna was filming Factory Girl in Pittsburgh and she referred to the city as ?Sh-tsburgh? in an interview and the people in Pittsburgh were so mad that Sienna actually had to make some kind of, like, hostage video apology with the mayor of Pittsburgh. Sure, it was publicity for the film, but I?m not sure it was GOOD publicity. But that was honestly what everything was like back then. Sienna was rude in an interview, and it gets blown up into a huge thing and suddenly no one is really talking about the film. As for Sienna relating to Britney Spears? it?s crazy that Sienna?s story was playing out in the exact same timeline as Britney?s. And it was a fked up moment to be a famous blonde with personal drama. Last thing: Sienna didn?t invent boho chic, she only popularized it, for the love of God. That was Goop-esque.
Photos courtesy of Backgrid.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
| Sienna Miller: After Jude Law cheated, 'there's a whole six weeks' that I don't remember' | Added 3 years ago | Source: CeleBitchy |
|
|
|
|
|
Sienna Miller had a recent interview with the Daily Beast to promote her latest film, Wander Darkly. Sienna has quietly been building a somewhat interesting career for herself in her 30s arguably, motherhood ?settled her down? from her Tabloid Twenties, where she had a series of relationships which kept her in the headlines but overshadowed her career. It all started with Jude Law. When Sienna and Jude started up, she became the biggest It Girl of the ?00s. It all came crashing down in the late summer of 2005, when the tabloids discovered that Jude was banging his kids? nanny, and Jude and Sienna broke off their engagement. What followed was a relationship with Rhys Ifans and a whirlwind public affair with the very married Balthazar Getty. Balthy and Rhys don?t get any shout-outs in this interview, but Sienna speaks at length about the 2005 drama with Jude. Some highlights:
Performing in As You Like It just after Jude cheated: ?That was one of the most challenging moments I hope I?ll ever have to experience. Because with that level of public heartbreak, to have to get out of a bed let alone stand in front of 800 people every night, it?s just the last thing you want to do. It was really hard. And the other thing was, it was at the height of all that paparazzi madness, and in London where there was an epidemic of bad behavior. They knew where I would be every nightThere?s a whole six weeks of that experience that I don?t remember. I have no recollection of it. People who came to see me said we had dinner, and I don?t remember. I was in so much shock over it all. And I?d really just begun. I was only 23. But if you get through that, you feel like you can get through anything.?
The News of the World was hacking her at that time too: ?I?m pretty resilient. There were moments where it came close to making me really feel crazy, and it was incredibly aggressive. The way I managed it was to get really litigious, start suing. I secretly recorded paparazzi on a lighter that was a camera, and got a privacy act taken to a high court to get the law changed in England, which essentially means that if I?m anywhere or coming out of anywhere where I can expect privacy they?re not allowed to take my photo. It was a long battle, and I think I was really paranoid. There was so much noise that it was hard to think straight and focus on my work, which I always took very seriously. It ate everything else. I look back on it and wonder how I did get through it?but I did.?
On the fake baby in American Sniper: ?I actually want to get that baby! I just like the moment where Bradley?s holding it and he tries to make it look real by wiggling its little arm. We?ve laughed about that many times. It?s funny, because I think there was at one time a real baby, then there was an animatronic baby, and I don?t know why we had a doll baby in that scene. But look, the movie worked!?
Memories of Heath Ledger: ?A boat would pick me up in the morning, take me across the Grand Canal, and pick up Heath in an apartment which was opposite mine. We?d have a Walkman with two earbuds, and he?d have one and I?d have the other, and we got to ride down the Grand Canal listening to music on the way to work. We shot in St. Mark?s Square, and the only day they gave us permission to shoot was when the city flooded, so by the time we were doing our close-ups we were up to our waists in water! The whole thing was like a fairy tale, and it?s bittersweet looking back at that film because I miss him. He was a friend and such a great talent, and to spend any amount of time with him was a gift.?
Her roles in her 30s: ?As I?ve gotten older, I?m more selective about the kinds of things I want to do. And I think because the tides have turned in Hollywood, people are more focused on examining what a female experience is?the female gaze, essentially. But then I look back on Factory Girl and Interview, which are characters that were very layered and complex. I think the noise of that decade was overwhelming what was actually going on in my work.?
[From The Daily Beast]
I mean, yeah, that 2005/Jude Law era of her life was legitimately crazy. She was just enjoying herself, being an It Girl, thinking she would marry this handsome actor. And then everything exploded and she couldn?t walk anywhere without ten paparazzi harassing her. I?ve always sort of wondered after everything that happened to her with the British media, if that?s why she decided to move permanently to New York. I also think LA was never an option for her because Balthazar Getty?s wife Rosetta is one of the most well-connected women in LA, and Sienna would have been shunned. All of that can be true at once!
Photos courtesy of Backgrid, WENN and Avalon Red.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
| Sienna Miller: Chadwick Boseman donated part of his salary for my paycheck | Added 4 years ago | Source: CeleBitchy |
|
|
|
|
|
Last year, the film 21 Bridges came out. It wasn?t really a hit or anything, but it was a relatively small-budget action-thriller and it did okay. It starred Chadwick Boseman, Sienna Miller and JK Simmons, among others. Empire?s latest cover story is devoted to Boseman and stories about his life and work. Empire spoke to former coworkers and Sienna Miller had an absolutely wonderful story of how she came on board 21 Bridges and what Chadwick did to get her paid properly.
As a producer on 21 Bridges, Boseman was instrumental in casting Miller for the role of detective Frankie Burns.
?He produced 21 Bridges, and had been really active in trying to get me to do it,? Miller tells Empire. ?He was a fan of my work, which was thrilling, because it was reciprocated from me to him, tenfold. So he approached me to do it, he offered me this film, and it was at a time when I really didnt want to work anymore. Id been working non-stop and I was exhausted, but then I wanted to work with him.?
Beyond pursuing Miller for the film, Boseman went the extra mile: fighting for his co-star to receive a higher pay packet for joining the production, to the extent that he donated part of his own salary to increase her fee. ?I didnt know whether or not to tell this story, and I havent yet. But I am going to tell it, because I think its a testament to who he was,? Miller says. ?This was a pretty big budget film, and I know that everybody understands about the pay disparity in Hollywood, but I asked for a number that the studio wouldnt get to. And because I was hesitant to go back to work and my daughter was starting school and it was an inconvenient time, I said, ?I?ll do it if Im compensated in the right way.? And Chadwick ended up donating some of his salary to get me to the number that I had asked for. He said that that was what I deserved to be paid.?
For Miller, Boseman?s generosity and support was unprecedented in the industry. ?It was about the most astounding thing that Ive experienced,? she says. ?That kind of thing just doesnt happen. He said, ?Youre getting paid what you deserve, and what youre worth.? Its just unfathomable to imagine another man in that town behaving that graciously or respectfully. In the aftermath of this Ive told other male actor friends of mine that story and they all go very very quiet and go home and probably have to sit and think about things for a while. But there was no showiness, it was, ?Of course Ill get you to that number, because thats what you should be paid.??
[From Empire]
We stan an actual KING. I mean, Sienna Miller is a good actress in *some* things, but for Chadwick to go out of his way to make sure she?s the one cast AND that she?s paid properly, even donating some of his own salary to make it happen? Sienna is right, it?s unheard of in Hollywood and every other industry. Chadwick really was that wonderful to every single person, wasnt he? He was like an angel on earth.
Embed from Getty Images
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
| Sienna Miller: 'I feel everybody should be able to play everybody' | Added 5 years ago | Source: CeleBitchy |
|
|
|
|
|
I?ve been seeing quotes from Sienna Miller?s Telegraph interview for days, but I never got around to caring, sorry not sorry. But that was before I knew she went Full ScarJo in the interview. If you remember, Scarlett Johansson is pretty sure she should be allowed to play ?any person or any tree or any animal.? What ScarJo meant at the time was that she should be able to play Japanese characters or transgender characters and NOT BE CRITICIZED for it. That?s the argument Sienna Miller made too, plus there was a weird Harvey Weinstein story.
On being able to play anyone or anything: ?I feel everybody should be able to play everybody. It seems absurd to me to start to legislate on creativity. That?s not trying to be insensitive ? of course, there are people who have a deeper understanding of experiences, and they should definitely be considered? It feels like liberal is becoming almost fascistic in its controlling of what can and cannot be done. It feels dangerous to me. If you started to restrict me to playing English women who went to boarding school at eight, I would give up.?
On Harvey Weinstein & Me Too: She says Me Too intersected unhappily with her own life. Miller revealed she used to call Harvey Weinstein Pops and said on some level she did this to deflect her suspicions about him. She said: Id go, Oi Pops, give us a job, and hed go, Ah, stappit. The actor, who worked with the disgraced film producer on numerous films including Factory Girl, also said no one ever propositioned her for work with sex, adding if they had she would probably have slapped them. She added that Weinstein did yell at her but that was just Harvey and she would brush it off as he spoke to men in the same way. I know that you couldnt say no to Harvey if he asked you to do something. For me, it would be, like, an extra week of press, so I imagine in a situation where its sexual, it would also be hard to say no, and thats crushing.
[From The Daily Mail]
There?s been a weird movement with actresses talking about their lowkey experiences with Harvey Weinstein in the past month or so. Renee Zellweger took pains to say that Harvey never did anything to her, and Jennifer Aniston said he only tried to bully her into wearing Marchesa. Now Sienna is saying that she called him ?Pops? and he never propositioned her or anything. I get that these women are being asked and they?re answering honestly. But it feels very much like ?look, he wasn?t raping and abusing EVERYBODY.? Which isn?t the fking point.
As for what she says about ?legislating on creativity,? baby girl can NOT play anything other than an English woman, so? I don?t know what she?s going on about. She can?t do any accent other than British, so it?s like she has to choose between ?Posh? and ?Cockney? and that?s her range. ?It feels like liberal is becoming almost fascistic in its controlling of what can and cannot be done.? Again, it?s not some huge liberal conspiracy to say that maybe cisgender peeps shouldn?t play transgender characters for awards. It?s not a huge liberal conspiracy to say that marginalized communities could use some genuine representation on-screen, rather than having ScarJo and Sienna Miller play every fking role.
Photos courtesy of WENN.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
| Sienna Miller in Dior at the 2018 NYFW amfAR gala: circus tent or enchanting? | Added 6 years ago | Source: CeleBitchy |
|
|
|
|
|
There?s something weird in the air for this year?s New York Fashion Week. It started happening during last fall?s big September NYFW showcases? people got bored. There weren?t a lot of celebrities. The clothes weren?t very notable. The fashion press yawned. That apathy has returned for the current NYFW – people just aren?t excited. There?s a lot of talk about what should be done differently. There?s a lot of talk about designers wanting to cancel their NYFW runway shows and possibly finding a different way to promote and showcase their lines.
Keep that in mind when you look through these photos of the ?big? amfAR gala last night, which was supposed to be the big, splashy opening event for NYFW. A bunch of ?who?? people turned up, alongside a bunch of B-listers and C-listers. I wasn?t even going to write about these fashion photos because there was no big-name celebrity there! But here we are. It?s a Thursday and why not. Here?s Sienna Miller looking like ten kinds of hell in Christian Dior. I would actually like this gown if it didn?t remind me of a circus tent.
Halsey performed at the gala, and she wore this Georges Hobeika. She looks better with hair?
Taraji P Henson in David Koma. Her face looks great and her body is incredible. The dress sucks though.
Ashley Graham In Vivienne Westwood. A boring dress AND bad hair.
Hailey Baldwin in Roberto Cavalli. I lol?d at this photo. Between her hair and her ?WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING AT?? expression, this was not the best appearance.
Lucy Hale in Jenny Packham. No. This looks so cheap.
Olivia Culpo in Redemption Couture. I actually think highly of Olivia?s beauty and her fashion sense, so why does her face look so ?off? and why does this gown look so? weird?
Photos courtesy of WENN.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
| Sienna Miller's confident early days: 'In my own mind I was like Meryl Streep' | Added 7 years ago | Source: CeleBitchy |
|
|
|
|
|
As I said a few weeks ago, I?m not really feeling The Whitewashing of Sienna Miller. It feels like she?s really pushing that narrative: now that she?s 35 years old and a single mother, people should take her more seriously. While I like that she?s ?grown up? enough where she?s not falling out of nightclubs and having torrid affairs with married men, it seems like we?re setting the bar too low? Sienna is still Sienna. She still loves drama. She?s still fundamentally a narcissist. I was reminded of that again as I read Sienna?s recent profile in The Guardian. She?s promoting The Lost City of Z and basically shilling for more work now that she?s a Serious Actress and no longer an It Girl. Some highlights:
She likes taking small parts in classy films: ?Well, it?s suited me since I had Marlowe to do these parts with these great film-makers, because this took a month, American Sniper was three, Foxcatcher was three weeks. I can, kind of, pop up in these classy things. I do feel frustrated sometimes by the fact that I want to get those roles. I watch films and I know how I?d do it and I want the opportunity. But at the same time you have to strategise in ways that, I don?t know, that I just haven?t done.? What would that involve? ?Oh, shmoozing and doing something to get foreign value. Foreign value. Numbers. You know, someone like Jennifer Lawrence has foreign value. She can get anything financed, she has foreign value for sure.?
How would she get foreign value? ?I would probably be the lead in a Marvel film. I?m not averse to doing something like that. I?m not saying that at all. But in order to get to be the star of a film of that sort, for people to bank on you in that way, you need numbers. I can?t get a film financed in the way that you would need to. It?s all about numbers. Which is absolute bollocks, because you can have two movie stars in something and if the film?s crap it can make nothing. The whole way that the industry is set up is numbers, and it doesn?t add up, they?re terrible at the numbers. But I?m not frustrated. I feel quite content.?
Her early days: ?I think, from a really young age, I had a real confidence. I had no doubt in my mind that?s what I would do. I wanted to be, like, in my own mind I was like Meryl Streep. I hadn?t given it much thought, like most things, but it?s like, that was my job, that?s what I wanted to do, and there was never any doubt in my mind. It?s actually a really interesting lesson in how much your own confidence and belief can influence things. You see it with Donald Trump. Not that I was like him. I mean, obviously, that?s a really sinister example. But you can absolutely manipulate the situation if you do not allow for doubt within it. I went into every audition believing that I could get this, and there was something about that confidence ? people were like: ?Oh!? ? that I think was disarming.?
Now her confidence has been whittled away: ?I don?t know, I think life just sort of happened in quite a full-on way, and I just learned through experience to just become ? you know, I just lost some of that innocence and positivity, which is growing up, which is getting older, which happens? I?m just more realistic now. It used to be that everyone was lovely and everything was great and I was so positive and I just couldn?t wait to live and experience. Now I?m a bit older, and a bit more tired all the time.?
Whether she ?internalizes the shame? of being called a homewrecker: ?Of course, yes. Yes, totally because it was everywhere or I felt like it was. It was very personal, and then you sort of think, well, is that who I am? Then you get older and you?re like, oh, f–k that.?
Giving evidence to the Leveson inquiry: ?I feel more powerful, definitely. It changed the terms. But then I also feel like if anyone wrote anything now it would not bother me. I don?t feel like I could get the shame. I have enough of a sense of my own self and my own life and who I actually am. I don?t think I really did back then, because I don?t think you do when you?re that age, and so I just ? it was just an assault, I just felt like I was being blasted with personalities that just perpetuated the behaviour that they wanted to perpetuate. It was a strange experience. But nowadays I feel relatively immune to that kind of bitchy criticism. I don?t feel like I am interesting enough now to be focused on in the way that I was. I don?t want to go out to a pub every night and get pissed. I don?t want that drama.?
She wants more kids but is incapable of planning ahead: ?I?d like an army of them? ? but laughs that she has always been hopeless at making plans. ?You can?t change who you are. I?ll always be the same person. I just grew up a little bit, got pregnant and had a kid.?
[From The Guardian]
?I just grew up a little bit, got pregnant and had a kid? is probably the most honest thing in this interview. That?s sort of why I?m not buying her whitewashing – because it seems like she just got a little bit older and had a kid and now we?re supposed to believe that she?s so different. At first I was ready to roll my eyes at the Meryl Streep line, but I understood what she was saying in context – she had the confidence, perhaps the arrogance, to believe that she was incapable of failing and that confidence helped her a lot in her early days.
Photos courtesy of WENN.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
| Sienna Miller Is Topless For Elle Magazine | Added 8 years ago | Source: HollywoodTuna |
|
|
|
|
|
I used to love Sienna Miller back when she was just another hot nobody, but according to my sources, people have started taking herseriously as a “real actress” these days. And that’s great news for the rest of us, because it means now Sienna gets to do“classy” topless photoshoots like this one for Elle Magazine. […]
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
| Sienna Miller digs 'bookish' dudes who are 'borderline, you know, on the spectrum' | Added 8 years ago | Source: CeleBitchy |
|
|
|
|
|
Sienna Miller covers the new issue of Porter Magazine, the summer issue. The photoshoot is nice and her hair looks especially good. When I see Sienna on the red carpet these days, I tend to think that a decade of hard-partying and sunbathing without SPF has caught up to her, but in this editorial, she looks sun-kissed and properly beachy. As for the interview? I don?t know you guys? I always think ?Sienna has done a lot of growing up over the past five years.? And then I?ll read an interview with Sienna and I?ll realize ?yeah, not so much.? She?s still pretty self-absorbed and? how do I say this? Like, Sienna is still stuck in a frame of mind where she?s a really big deal. Like, it?s always 2005 to Sienna. And the world sort of moved on? She?s not an It Girl anymore, I?m just saying. Some highlights:
On her ex-fianc Jude Law: ?We don?t see each other that much. I care about him enormously.?
Being an It Girl a decade ago: ?Thank God I actually survived it. I watched that Amy Winehouse documentary and, not to compare myself, but there was footage that? it was a similar time, and you just lose your mind. I couldn?t cope but it?s resilience that kicked in. And no heroin addiction, thank God.?
She went into therapy: “I just got to a point where…I couldn’t dig myself out, I couldn’t make decisions, I felt pretty assaulted by life and not in control. I think as you get older you have to really cultivate your mind and have a deep understanding of self, otherwise you just become lonely and isolated and unsatisfied and unfulfilled, and however your perfect little life looks on paper, there will be a sense of unfulfillment if you haven’t explored the nature, the very depths of who you are? It?s terrifying but extraordinary. It?s 10 years of therapy in a week. I got back a week ago. It takes a while to settle. It?s focused on Freudian analysis, which is basically how behaviour patterns are all learned, how you can trace them all back to either parents or surrogates, then you kind of let go and examine who you would have been if you hadn?t taken on all these negative traits. There?s an immense amount of space in my head and there is no f?king noise in it for the first time. All that noise has just gone.?
She wants more children: “I would love more. I’m suddenly feeling very broody for more babies, and my daughter’s desperate to have a sibling.”
She digs intellectual dudes: ?I like intelligence ? it?s the only thing I?ve ever been attracted to. People who aren?t clever enough fall by the wayside. They?re a motley crew my ex-boyfriends, if you lined them up, it would be strange. I don?t care about that [looks], but you know, within limits? Someone staggeringly beautiful and thick is totally ugly to me. It sounds silly but I like bookish academics who are slightly odd, and borderline, you know, on the spectrum.?
[From The Standard]
It?s still crazy to me that within the span of a handful of years, she was on-again with Jude Law, dating Rhys Ifans and then the mistress to a still-married Balthazar Getty. Those men, are they pillars of intellect? I think Rhys Ifans is probably quite clever, but Jude Law and Balthy? Um, not really. I?m not saying Jude is an idiot, but considering he?s not smart enough to consistently wear protection, I wouldn?t call him a deep thinker. And of course Sienna describes her type as ?borderline, you know, on the spectrum.? She thinks she?s being so cute, like guys on the autism spectrum are all bookish, eccentric hotties just dying to date neurotic former It Girls. And is it just me or was that comment about Amy Winehouse really unnecessary? Sienna?s all, ?Me and Amy were like in the completely same situation but like I wasn?t a heroin addict, hahaha, JK LOLZ.?
Photos courtesy of Porter Magazine.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
| Sienna Miller Is One Pretty Gal | Added 9 years ago | Source: HollywoodTuna |
|
|
|
|
|
I don’t know about you perverts, but I’m really digging all the Sienna Miller hotness we’ve been getting lately. And here she is at the San Sebastian International Film Festival looking mighty fine, even though I thinkshe might’ve accidentally put herdress on backwards. How embarrassing. view all 13 photos Photos: WENN.com
More Photos Here
|
| |
|
|
|
|
| |
| | | 5.526.340 Photos Online+ 11.398 past week 1.804 Users Online | | |
| | | | | | We Salute Victoria Justice
Photos of Victoria Justice will not count in your daily view limit, if you are a registered member
Tribute ends in 3 days | | |
| |
|