Daniel Radcliffe attended the launch of the
Kill Your Darlings Cut Up Art Exhibition in London on Thursday evening. Photos of the
Harry Potter actor outside Waterloo Train Station can be found below.
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Dan, while promoting
Kill Your Darlings and the second season of
A Young Doctor's Notebook, set to debut on Sky Arts on Thursday night,
talked about how celebrities had no place to complain as they released all their intimate details through social media, such as Twitter or Facebook. He will also he a guest yet again next month on BBC's The Graham Norton Show, to broadcast in the UK on December 6.
Quote:
"There's certain things you can do to make it a lot easier on yourself," the 24-year-old said.
"If you don't, for instance, go to premieres that aren't for a film you're in, or don't just turn up at other events and stuff like that, then that's going to help to not fuel the interest.
"Also, I don't have Twitter and I don't have Facebook, and I think that makes things a lot easier because if you go on Twitter and tell everybody what you're doing moment to moment and then claim you want a private life, then no one is going to take that request seriously."
"When I was 18 or 19 there was definitely a level of frustration around ... I did have to think where I went more than a lot of my friends and you do get a little frustrated around that age, but ultimately it's childish, petulant - oh I want that too.
"People always say to me 'Do you feel like you missed out on a childhood? Do you feel like you had your childhood taken away?' And I'm like 'No, ridiculous... kids who are abused have their childhoods taken away from them'."
"It's as much to myself, as to anyone else. People always say 'oh he's got a chip on his shoulder' like it's a bad thing. I think it's a perfectly good thing if you let it motivate you.
"When you fall into a position when you're 11 years old, you do tend to think that, you know, everyone, you were lucky to get there. And I was lucky to get there. And I think there's a sense that you just fell into it and that you rode the wave and carried on.
"And that's not what I'm about. I don't know how many people think like that - there may be none, there may be millions, but it doesn't matter. It fires you up."