Quote by Willow Shields
I didnt audition for the part! The role was offered to me, and I w

I didnt audition for the part! The role was offered to me, and I was so excited to be a part of The Haunting Hour. It is such a cool show and it was so much fun shooting the Intruders. – Willow Shields

Other quotes by Willow Shields

Its not a struggle, but sometimes when youre gone for a month or two, you start to miss your friends. I love acting so much that it fills that gap of being sad about not being able to see my friends. – Willow Shields

Category:
sad
Read Quote

I definitely look up to Meryl Streep because shes been in so many amazing movies, and I just think that shes one of the greatest actresses out there. I also look up to Jennifer Lawrence, especially knowing her and knowing that she is so awesome and so nice. – Willow Shields

Category:
amazing
Read Quote
Other Quotes from
cool
category

Most people are really cool and I really dont mind talking to them and answering their questions. – Jimmy Carl Black

Category:
cool

And of course Ive got kids of my own now, and they love me being in the Harry Potter films. Im now part of a phenomenon. You become incredibly cool to your kids, and you get a young fan base. So you became the cool dad at school. Youre suddenly hip. – Gary Oldman

Category:
cool

I thought that would be kind of cool, to make a bad guy look sympathetic. – Christopher Atkins

Category:
cool

I dont think of myself as hot or cool or anything, just a dork. – Ashley Olsen

Category:
cool

Random Quotes

I dont like doing movies, period. Movies are hard. I like TV. – Kathy Griffin

Category:
movies

Nobody ever told me what to read, or ever put poetry in my way. – Isaac Rosenberg

Category:
Poetry

The question is how to bring a work of imagination out of one language that was just as taken-for-granted by the persons who used it as our language is by ourselves. Nothing strange about it. – Robert Fitzgerald

Category:
Imagination

My English text is chaste, and all licentious passages are left in the obscurity of a learned language. – Edward Gibbon