The most important thing is, whatever you do decide to choose, take it seriously and do your best.
There I am, watching Philip Seymour Hoffman, one of my favourite actors in the world, walk into the room dressed up as Father Christmas, being hilarious, and I'm suddenly thinking, 'Where am I?'
There are few things that are more revealing about someone than the way that they talk about a piece of literature or a play. You very quickly come to have a much deeper understanding of someone than you would if you just mingled together in a pub saying, 'All right, how are you?'
I literally do not understand how New Yorkers deal with summer.
To be an English person in my 20s, doing a Broadway show - it's one of the mountains I wanted to climb.
I left school early in my last year before I took my A-levels. I wasn't expelled. It was just a mutual understanding. I wasn't interested in going to school and they said, 'You're not turning up,' so we severed ties. Both sides appreciated it.
I write constantly about everything.
Mental health is such a complex thing and so difficult to diagnose. What is a mental problem? Who does have mental problems? What's the difference between mental problems and depression and sadness?
Basically, I was a very serious film fan. I watched a lot of cinema and contemporary and European film.
I felt that my decisions, whether good or bad, would always be supported by my parents, because I was loved and respected.