Top 115 Quotes & Sayings by Dakota Fanning

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American actress Dakota Fanning.
Last updated on November 24, 2024.
Dakota Fanning

Hannah Dakota Fanning is an American actress. She rose to prominence at the age of seven for her performance as Lucy Dawson in the drama film I Am Sam (2001), for which she received a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination at age eight, making her the youngest nominee in SAG history. Fanning played major roles as a child actress in the films Uptown Girls (2003), The Cat in the Hat (2003), Man on Fire (2004), War of the Worlds (2005), Dreamer (2005), and Charlotte's Web (2006), and the eponymous character in Coraline (2009).

I love who I am and I love my life, but if I could be someone else, I'd be Beyonce in two seconds.
I'm very proud to be a woman - you're part of a tribe. Automatically, you feel connected to another woman when you meet them. That's really special.
My dad named me Dakota and my mom came up with my first name Hannah. So it's Hannah Dakota Fanning. — © Dakota Fanning
My dad named me Dakota and my mom came up with my first name Hannah. So it's Hannah Dakota Fanning.
I've been a ballerina since I was two, but I've always wanted to be an actress.
In the happy scenes there were really fun times. Sean would say really funny stuff because he likes to improv. I would want to laugh, but you are not allowed to do that during the take.
I never get scared making these kinds of movies because it's all make-believe, but I did cry when I saw the finished version of Man On Fire because it is so sad.
My favorite actresses are Cameron Diaz, Julia Roberts and Julie Andrews.
I like everything perfect. Everything has to be neat. My sister is 5, and she's more messy than I am. I make my bed every morning, everything's perfect. My shoes are all arranged. It's sad. I'm a little like Ray, a little bit.
Often, when you're on a movie set, you're miserable. It's cold. You're hungry. You're tired. It's still dark out. And yet, there's no place I'd rather be. It's the happiest I am, and the most calm.
Someone once said about me that I talk to everyone the same, no matter what age they are. I don't see kids and adults. I see everyone the same.
I love the feeling I get when I'm on a set; I love reading the scripts, playing the characters, getting to be someone else.
One of my favorite things about doing movies is that you get to do different things you'd never do in real life.
I always talk about my characters like they're real people.
It's rare to see women in a film who are not somehow validated by a male or discussing a male or heartbroken by a male,or end up being happy because of a male. It's interesting to think about, and it's very true.
I don't know whether it's audiences or filmmakers who want characters to be likable today, but I don't think actors are afraid of their characters being unlikable. — © Dakota Fanning
I don't know whether it's audiences or filmmakers who want characters to be likable today, but I don't think actors are afraid of their characters being unlikable.
That was really cool. I got to kiss a little boy. I was 7 and he was 10, and his name is Thomas Curtis. He was the first boy I've ever kissed in my entire life and he was three years older than me.
I don't throw my clothes out after one wear. Shocking, I know.
I know how to hit a mark without looking. I instinctively know where my eye line should be. That's all 100%. But your character and the story are always different, so the emotional part is not muscle memory. You're still surprised by stuff and get the adrenaline.
There is a lot of negativity that you welcome into your life when you're an actor. You bare your soul for anyone to see.
It's just such an honor to say that I was in something by Steven Spielberg. I feel so blessed I got to meet such great people, and I got to go to a beautiful place, Vancouver, and I had a great time.
I've been very lucky enough to do all kinds of movies. All the movies that I've done have been very different, and all the characters I've done have been very different. I feel very lucky to have been able to do the movies that I've done.
Each role that I've played has had a piece of a dream role in it.
Everyone in New York is very self-involved. They're focused on themselves. Like, walking down the street, people are just in their own zone.
I think I was a Japanese schoolgirl in another life. That's how much I love Hello Kitty.
My mom played tennis for, like, six hours a day and went to college on a tennis scholarship, because that was the way she could go to school. So they instilled in me the idea that you have to work hard for the things you want in life and never complain.
I played the young Reese Witherspoon in 'Sweet Home Alabama' when I was 7, and the boy who played the young Josh Lucas was 10.
I think I really like psychology because my job is all about getting inside another person's mind and thoughts.
Acting is what I love to do. I wouldn't trade it for the world. I don't think of it as work. It's really fun for me.
Charlie Sheen gave me a signed headshot. I think it said, 'Keep it real.' But 'real' was spelled 'reel,' like a film reel.
I think I am the same kind of person I would have been if I wasn't an actor. I am not a robot.
My parents never talked to me like I was a kid. Maybe that's why I've been seen as mature.
Courtney Love is really cool and funny. I would like to meet Julia Roberts and Cameron Diaz. I think I could play their daughters.
I was being groomed to be a tennis player for sure. My grandparents and parents realised I had a natural athletic ability and if I was forced to do it, I could probably do well. But all I wanted was to play pretend.
My mom, she is the most unbelievable mom that you could ever have in your entire life and she's always with me on everything. The most I've ever been away from her is two days. I love her more than anybody could ever know.
I learned to read at two. I was in a Montessori school and they teach you to read really, really young.
I think what has helped me is that I've never thought of myself as a child star. If you think of yourself like that, you might have problems!
It's something that's always been there for me, that I have huge blue eyes - it's been something that people have always talked about.
I was always into fashion because my mom has always been interested in fashion. She majored in fashion merchandising in college, and it's always been something we have in common.
I'm the girl that's on the beach with a hat on, under an umbrella. Like, very shaded. But my weird thing is, I only tan my legs. My whole body's covered in the shade, and I tan my legs.
If I see a movie on TV that I'm in, I usually will watch it for that reason: It's like I'm watching another person. — © Dakota Fanning
If I see a movie on TV that I'm in, I usually will watch it for that reason: It's like I'm watching another person.
There's a history where, when women get to a certain age in this industry, the roles become strictly the mother, the wife, or the older single woman. There should be more of a variety because there are so many different paths that humans take, and they should be given a platform to be seen.
When people say hello to me, I feel like maybe I know them from somewhere, because they say, like, 'Hi! How are you?' And I'm like, 'Oh, hi!' And then I realize, 'Oh, no, they just think they know me because they watched me in a movie.' Which is cool, but definitely not a normal thing.
When I'm working, even though it's sometimes challenging and difficult, there's still no place I would rather be.
I'm home schooled, and I have a teacher that goes with me on all my movies.
I think my generation is obsessed with instant gratification. We want everything now, now, now.
When I go home, I play with my baby dolls and strollers and diaper bags, and play with my sisters.
I have always wanted to act ever since I was a little girl. I would put a blanket under my shirt and pretend that I was pregnant. Then, I would go through childbirth.
Being a known person is pretty much all I've known. I don't remember much of a time when people didn't know who I was.
I never skimp on TV. I watch an embarrassing amount of TV shows. I don't even know how I do it.
In New York, you walk everywhere, so you're amongst people all of the time, and everybody is in a hurry and going somewhere or has something on their minds. And in L.A., it's still much more of a laid-back life, at least in my experience.
I was raised by very traditional Southern parents with Southern manners. You don't air your dirty laundry to people that aren't your family or your friends. Why would I ever want to portray myself as anything other than together?
I have a weird vision of relationships because my parents have known each other since second grade, and they got married right out of college. — © Dakota Fanning
I have a weird vision of relationships because my parents have known each other since second grade, and they got married right out of college.
The hardest thing is at the end you have to say bye to all these people who you have worked with for so many months. It was really sad not to see them anymore. But you have the parties that you go to and you get to see them, like the premieres and the screenings.
It was really really neat to make the movie because there were mentally challenged actors in the movie. So that was really really cool to work with them and they were always really happy, and they made everybody really happy on the set too.
I find dates, in general, horrific. We have to sit there and ask these questions and pretend to eat a meal, and it just feels so stiff.
If you don't love what you are doing, it could be misery.
I've always wanted to be an actress, ever since I was a little girl. I've always played the mom and I play my sister as the daughter. I wanted to be an actress on television and movies instead of just around the house.
We can't continue to take from our planet the way we do and not give anything back, and the idea of, 'Oh, but it's fine, I won't have to deal with it in my lifetime,' well, you need to think about the future generations who will have to deal with it.
ER was one of my favourites. I played a car accident victim who has leukemia. I got to wear a neck brace and nose tubes for the two days I worked.
It's hard to remember, when you look at a magazine or when you look at pictures of people, and you forget that those people are people like you. They have flaws and insecurities. That's so easy to forget, even for me, as somebody who's sometimes in those magazines.
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