Natalia Dyer
NeTi II--
NeTi II-- Adaptive
NeTi II-- Adaptive
Dyer: "The hardest thing is not caring about other people's opinions."
Dyer: "I was always kind of searching for the right social group in high school and never really felt like I belonged with any one specific clique."
Dyer: "I'm really drawn to relationship stories and human emotions."
Dyer: "When people approach me, it's a vulnerable moment for everybody. You can see that sometimes people don't quite know what to say to you, but they want to come up to you, and you can tell they're nervous, and it's really humbling and endearing."
Dyer: "I'm not a momentary decision maker. I like well-informed decisions."
Dyer: "Sometimes I wake up and look in the mirror and am like, 'Whoa!' I don't know if I'm having more fun, but I'm having a lot of fun."
Dyer: "I do see a lot of roles that are, like, the girlfriend or the love interest or the girl next door. Maybe not totally well-rounded kinds of characters - women who are more of a plot device in a way."
Dyer: "People do recognize me. I walk around with sunglasses, and I think I'm hidden, but they see me."
Dyer: "To go from not being recognised at all to literally, the next day, having people stop you in the street was very, very weird. I had to buy myself a great baseball cap."
Dyer: "Good luck dragging me into a horror movie! I get so scared. It's an overactive imagination or something."
Dyer: "I don't really like scary movies. I don't seek them out. I'm very sensitive and impressionable. I'm the kind of person who will sleep with the light on for a week if I get really scared."
Dyer: "Social media - It's not real life. I only caught the tail end of it in high school. It can be good, and it can be fun, but you can't let it get toxic."
Dyer: "I do have Instagram, but I try to avoid going on it too much. Some people are very good at how they use it, and they enjoy that interaction, but I want to be very careful."
Dyer: "My mom loves the '80s. I grew up hearing a lot about the '80s."
Dyer: "I think people are going to places that they weren't able to with television before, and I think Netflix really paved the way for that. With freedom comes better content, and with better content comes great actors and a bigger audience. I think that has just snowballed into a movement for making really great TV."
Dyer: "There's a lot to love about Nancy Wheeler in the second season of 'Stranger Things.'"