I don't want to be 'Halsey: America's Sweetheart,' or 'Halsey: Bad Girl.' If you can sum up my career in a clickbait headline, I've done something wrong.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I don't want to be 'box-office girl,' but I don't want to be 'that indie girl' either.
The worst thing is always thinking of titles for records, with some reason behind them, and she just came out with the word, which she thought was a good word, a hard word, and since then we've sort of attached loads of meaning to it.
What we really have to do is stop the adjective before the job title - whether it's 'black actor,' a 'gay actor' or anything actor.
If I couldn't be Dick Van Dyke, I wanted to be Art Carney.
I just don't think the title 'MJ's daughter' fits me.
I cannot be Mary Hart - or even worse, Samantha Harris - and stand there with my hip out talking about Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes taking Suri to an art museum without making fun of it.
It's good to have a title that's not just one word. If you're gonna title it, you might as well try and say something.
I feel I disappoint people when I am not 'Samantha.' They seem surprised when I don't have the same voice and the same mannerisms. They were booking 'Samantha,' and I would show up.
I wouldn't define myself as the girl from 'Pulp Fiction.'
I originally passed on 'Girls' because I thought TV was evil.
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