My plan B, if acting doesn't work out, is to work with disabled children.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
When I am in Madrid, I just like to see my friends and walk around the city. I go to the school where my mum works and help out. My plan B, if acting doesn't work out, is to work with disabled children.
I wouldn't sacrifice my business for no acting career because my business is something, ultimately, that I know I'm going to pass down to my kids, and that's most important to me than anything else in the world. I can't pass an acting career down to my children.
I think having children in general is always very helpful for acting.
I highly recommend getting your career established first and then having children.
I grew up in an acting family. I was heavily discouraged from doing it myself when I was young, which is the only responsible route to take with any child, because it's not necessarily the easiest of lives.
I was always told at school that you had to have a back-up plan, but all I ever wanted to do was act. There was no plan B for me.
Plan B is really a little garage band of three people, and our mandate has been to help get difficult material, that might not otherwise get made, to the screen and to work with directors we respect.
My plan was to be able to make a living as an actor.
When you have children, you realise you can't plan anything. There's no Plan A, no Plan B. Life will happen and you will go with it.
I won't do a role which children in my family cannot look up to.