She just wrapped up "White House Down" and now Maggie Gyllenhaal is gracing the cover of Woman & Home magazine's January 2013 issue.
The 35-year-old actress looked adorable in blue for the front page shoot while dishing about everything from her life's evolution to entering womanhood.
A few highlights from Miss Gyllenhaal's interview are as follows. For more, be sure to pay a visit to Woman & Home!
On her life:
"I feel like I've entered a new era in my life, and it's very liberating. As you grow up, your life changes and so does the way you think. I've come to the point in my life where I'm doing things differently. I'm enjoying having a new perspective and steering my life in a different direction to what I'd previously had in mind."
On the roles she chooses:
"I feel more comfortable with the idea of being seductive and powerful in the roles I want to play. I have a tremendous love for difficult material but those choices can be limiting and often you don't get to work as much as you'd like to. After I had Ramona, I suddenly felt a maternal impulse to be a good working mom too."
On womanhood:
"I've grown into womanhood - I don't feel a need to be different anymore. I don't see myself as being limited to smaller, independent films. I chose a lot of those roles in the past because I was drawn to playing extreme or eccentric women, but you can also achieve a lot with very ordinary characters, and tat's the beauty of what you can do as an actress."
Article Source: gossipcenter.com
On her life:
"I feel like I've entered a new era in my life, and it's very liberating. As you grow up, your life changes and so does the way you think. I've come to the point in my life where I'm doing things differently. I'm enjoying having a new perspective and steering my life in a different direction to what I'd previously had in mind."
On the roles she chooses:
"I feel more comfortable with the idea of being seductive and powerful in the roles I want to play. I have a tremendous love for difficult material but those choices can be limiting and often you don't get to work as much as you'd like to. After I had Ramona, I suddenly felt a maternal impulse to be a good working mom too."
On womanhood:
"I've grown into womanhood - I don't feel a need to be different anymore. I don't see myself as being limited to smaller, independent films. I chose a lot of those roles in the past because I was drawn to playing extreme or eccentric women, but you can also achieve a lot with very ordinary characters, and tat's the beauty of what you can do as an actress."
Article Source: gossipcenter.com