Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Canadian actress Rachelle Lefevre.
Last updated on November 18, 2024.
Rachelle Marie Lefèvre is a Canadian actress. She has starred in the television series Big Wolf on Campus and had recurring roles in What About Brian, Boston Legal, and Swingtown. She played the vampire Victoria in the first two films of the Twilight saga. In 2011, she starred in the ABC medical drama Off the Map, followed by the CBS series A Gifted Man (2011–2012) and Under the Dome (2013–2015).
I actually did not have a date to my prom. I ended up taking a friend.
I'm obsessed with being human.
There is no substitute for a real location when you're trying to shoot the jungle. You can't just go anywhere. You've got to go where it's lush and green and there really is those mountain ranges, the trees and the ocean.
I volunteer with School on Wheels in Los Angeles, and I also tutor with Koreh L.A.
I am tone deaf.
I go to various boot camps 4-5 times a week, and I try to get some Pilates in there to thin and tone.
The thing I love about vampires that I find so fascinating is that, unlike other sci-fi creations, they aren't monsters from the get-go, they're human beings first... and so what kind of human you are would dictate what kind of vampire you would be.
I'm always looking to do things that are really different from each other.
I came from Canada, where it's freezing cold for seven months out of the year.
I like stepping out of my comfort zone.
I feel like there's different kinds of evil and there's different kinds of villains, and as much as I would like to be dark and playing with knives... it's not me and it's not my look.
Most actors will tell you that it takes a while to figure out what you want to be because we just want to do everything we see on TV and don't know that 'actor' is a job yet.
Dating and getting attention from boys was something that came later to me.
Hawaii is absolutely beautiful.
My hair walks into a room before I do.
I'm just basically a workaholic.
I drink tons of water. It always sounds like the lamest thing, but there's a reason you keep hearing this over and over again. It really works.
My awkward stage extended well into high school.
'Twilight's got some avid - and rabid - fans.
I'm a workaholic because I love to play, if that makes sense.
For me, playing a vampire isn't about the fact that they're a vampire, it's about who they are specifically.
I'm the one with the wicked curve ball.
A lot of our lives are about being polite.
I went to McGill University, but I didn't graduate. They won't graduate me because I didn't have a degree in any one thing. I studied everything and they were like, "You studied too many things, so we can't give you a degree."
I go to a lot of museums, I read a ton of poetry - anything that's a creative expression of oneself, I find really inspiring.
You only know who you think you are. You sort of feel like you could change at any minute.
I'm always a little skeptical when I hear people promoting a film and they say it has something for everyone.
The idea of somebody being a fan of something I can totally understand. The idea of being followed around by cameras or people taking pictures of you eating a hamburger, I kind of have trouble even imaging it.
I'm interested in everything about what it means to be a human being, so every role is an excuse to delve into a different way of life, a different socio-economic background, and a different tragic or comedic circumstance.
Twilight''s got some avid - and rabid - fans.
I try to be really, really specific, because each character is really an individual and you have to find out what makes them unique.
In Hawaii, they're happy to hear that you're filming a show. They love it that people actually come and make use of their beautiful landscapes.
With any character, I try to focus more on who the character is and how they got to be who they are.