When I was growing up, it was the guys who were hardest at school who got the prettiest girls. It's a status thing.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
When you think of the people who were important in your life, prettiness was not a factor. They might have been old, fat and toothless - but they were there.
I feel fortunate that I'm not a beauty. I'm not a classic beauty. I feel it is harder for girls who are like that. There are fewer parts.
I wasn't the prettiest girl in class. No breasts, short legs, gangly teeth. I didn't think I was model material, that's for sure.
When I was 15, I didn't think I was the prettiest at all. But then something happened when I was 20-something - I thought, actually, I really like what I look like. Just because I don't look like everybody else doesn't mean that I can't be just as beautiful.
I didn't grow up thinking I was pretty; there was always a prettier girl than me. So I learned to be smart and tried to be funny and develop the inside of me, because I felt like that's what I had.
I used to be prettier than I am, but I think I look better now. I was a pretty boy. Particularly in my early movies. I don't like looking at them so much. There's a sort of pretty thing about me.
There is an epidemic right now of girls dumbing themselves down... in middle school because they think it makes them attractive.
When I was very young I never thought I was attractive, because I was a tomboy and I was always the biggest girl in the class.
In high school, it was all about popularity, being with the boyfriend and all the girls thinking he's cute.
Girls in my school were always prettier.