How do you approach acting?
In my childhood I was always searching for hiding places. I would try to disappear somewhere in the house where I lived, or seek out new spaces which I could explore, secretly. I love the photographer Francesca Woodman: during her lifetime she took self-portraits in dilapidating spaces, in empty rooms, behind furniture or around corners. She’s always rushing through the frame or blurred so you never see her fully. As an actor, you have to reveal yourself completely and go to difficult places so when it’s over, I just want to retreat and feel myself in that physical state of hiding. I am studying at the State Academy of Fine Arts Karlsruhe, and hiding is also a very big topic for me in my work there.
What do you do on your days off?
I don’t really have days off to be honest. When I’m not shooting, I go to the atelier, or I have classes at the academy. My professor Ulla Von Brandenburg once said to me “As an artist you never have vacation, because whatever you are doing, you have to collect and you have to memorise. You always have to absorb the moments.” I go for walks, that’s a time when I can turn off the working lights a bit, especially in Autumn. Fildena http://valleyofthesunpharmacy.com/fildena/
Do you have a favourite item of clothing?
That changes often, but at the moment it’s a black trench coat. It’s a simple, classic coat which you can wear on top of everything. I love how comfortable and warm it is and how you can disappear into it, a bit like a cloak. The trench coat has a long history in film as well. It was important for lots of interesting, iconic characters, like Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany’s, or the detective Columbo.