Dove Cameron
FiNe II--
Demographics
Gender Female
Birth Name Chloe Celeste Hosterman
Birthplace Seattle, Washington, U.S.
Birth Date January 15, 1996
Ethnicity Northwestern/Eastern European
Overview Austrian/Rhenish/Alsatian German, French, English, Scottish, Danish, Hungarian, Irish, some Dutch
Nationality American
Career Singer, actress
Color Season Light Summer
Notes and Motifs
Disney star turned pop star
FiNe I--- Seelie
FiNe I--- Seelie
FiNe II-- Seelie
FiNe II-- Seelie
Cameron: "I don't want to have to think about what is right; I want to live right. And what that means to me is going to be different to some of my fans, some of their parents, and some other role models."
Cameron: "I'm very competitive and academic."
Cameron: "I think a lot of people think I'm either unintelligent because I'm a very happy person and I have a lot of energy or that it's a fake happiness, like fake energy. I completely understand that because it's a lot to handle, and I am a very emotional human being."
Cameron: "Everything is just so much more romantic and real when it's yours and it's private."
Cameron: “I would call myself incredibly anxious, and I have dealt with depression. And I do have episodes of absolutely what feels like mania or something that is like I’m all of a sudden in the pits of despair. I can’t get myself out. I’m on the floor and I’m crying.”
Cameron: "Laziness in my biggest pet peeve of all time. Get up, make a plan, do the work, and love yourself, people!"
Cameron: "Every single character I've ever played has a little bit of me in them just because every single human in the world has a little bit of everything in them."
Cameron: “Turn your fear into excitement.”
Cameron: "My version of a good role model is everything that I have strived to become over the years, as I have a deep desire to live an honest life and give relentlessly and openly to people who look up to me."
Cameron: "I have always felt like I was just sort of waiting to catch up to the rest of myself."
Cameron: "This may be a bit of a broad statement, but I don't think there's anyone that I've met that I haven't created a bit of a deep relationship with. It's a really lovely thing to create a relation with people that might not anticipate that closeness. And that's kind of the light of my life, getting to be close to people."
Cameron: “Fear is another reason to try harder.”
Cameron: “I skipped ninth grade. I went from eighth to tenth, and then I graduated a year early to start working, and it was a big blessing for me because I was not a school person, although I really do miss having that kind of environment.”
Cameron: "I firmly believe there are no bad people."
Cameron: "I think when things get hard with your family, it's really easy to want to isolate yourself. The world is so harsh, so when stuff happens outside, you want to go to your family, but when stuff happens inside your family, you sort of start to feel like, 'I'm alone. There is no place I can go to where just nothing will happen to me.'"
Cameron: “I feel all of a sudden like I’ve come down to reality. I feel more grounded and human than ever.”
Cameron: “I was scared when I was younger to talk about certain topics because there are a lot of people in this industry that tell you not to speak about a lot of things. I think so much normalcy would come from demystifying a lot in our own personal lives for younger people to look at.”
Cameron: "I love women. I love celebrating women."
Cameron: "If you think about the people trying to hurt you, rather than just trying to hurt them back, you can understand it has nothing to do with you."
Cameron: "When I was a kid, I always wanted to dye my hair crazy colors."
Cameron: "I made myself memorize how to spell antidisestablishmentarianism in under 3 seconds when I was 6 years old because my sister told me it was the longest word she knew."
Cameron: “The less seriously you take your life the happier you will be.”
Cameron: “I have some loose goals, some direction, definitely lots of love and feeling for both music and film, as mediums and art are ways to further connect with myself and my life. Whatever comes, comes — and wherever I find myself, I’m there.”
Cameron: "I had the longest awkward phase. I had braces for 3 years; I cut my own bangs too far back and they looked like a bowl cut, and I broke my nose twice."
Cameron: “There is nothing like the buzz of singing one of your songs during a show and hearing your fans singing with you.”
Cameron: “When you’re 10, 11, 12, and you’re watching your idols, you feel like you know them. I found more in common with these people when they talked in interviews than I did with my classmates.”
Cameron: "I'm never not planning for my future house. Most of the files on my laptop are devoted to different rooms in my dream house. I'm embarrassing."
Cameron: "I'm not a huge party girl. When I turned 18, the thing I was most excited about was being able to vote for the first time."
Cameron: “When I’m acting, I just come up with people I’ve known, and I stick with it.”
Cameron: “I actually started snowboarding when I was 7 years old, so I felt very comfortable auditioning for a snowboarding movie, and I thought that would give me some leg up.”
Cameron: “I can’t make eye contact when people sing ‘Happy Birthday’ to me.”
Cameron: “I’ve been writing music all my life. My mom is a poet, and my dad was a pianist, so music and writing was always a part of the deal.”
Cameron: "I would just say that human beings are stronger together. Relying on someone else is not a sign of weakness; it shows strength that you're able to accept that you need help."
Cameron: “My absolute favorite thing about working on ‘Liv and Maddie’ is my cast and crew. The people that I spend almost every hour of every day with. Your cast has great influence over the quality of your life, and I’ve been blessed with not just a cast, but a family.”
Cameron: “I honestly think what skyrocketed me into professionalism was learning how to play two people and still live through the day.”
Cameron: "I have a lot of affection to give, and sometimes I'm a little overbearing."
Cameron: "Playing two people is definitely difficult, but it's made possible by everyone around me, and it's a big team effort."
Cameron: "I personally believe in progress. I think one of the most debilitating and harming things you can do to a child is to keep them in the dark."
Cameron: "I think that every human - and this is something, you know, like, your years from 14 to, like, 23 are kind of, like, super, super existential, and you're figuring out life."
Cameron: "As an actor, you are either emulating someone else, or some version of yourself."
Cameron: "I think it works differently for everyone. Some people do amazing things with research, but for me, it just gets convoluted, and I start to think too much."
Cameron: "It's hard to be a teenager. It's lonely, and you feel like no one understands you. I think that's natural, and my mother let me have the space to feel that way."
Cameron: "I don't know that there's any rhyme or reason to bullying... it's not even the bully's fault, which is why it's such a difficult thing to combat."
Cameron: "It's not like you can say, 'This is the right side and this is the wrong side,' because obviously, a happy person is never going to want to inflict pain on somebody else. So the bullies are really victims themselves and yada, yada, yada, pop psychology, but it's true."
Cameron: "Singing has been a passion of mine, equal to or greater than acting, ever since I was very small."
Cameron: "Sure, they can take your binder, but they can't take whatever special thing you have inside you."