For FKA Twigs, Robert Pattinson's rumored fiancé, there is nothing more uncool than being mainstream. Designtrend.com has the deets.
The 27-year-old singer who is Tahliah Debrett Barnett in real life thinks that "it's so bad to be basic," she told Sunday Times. "I'm not the kind of person who goes to an exhibition on a Thursday night just because everyone is ... I don't have an average day. I hate that kind of thing."
This should be the reason why she still has not seen her boyfriend's very average, and very mainstream film "Twilight".
"I don't understand what the levels [of fame] are. I'm a bit naïve," Twigs said. "I don't read 'Heat,' for example. I don't engage in that world, even with myself, even with my own career."
Does this also explain her refusal to acknowledge her engagement to the 29-year-old Pattinson?
"Who told you I was getting married?" Twig responded when asked about the rumored engagement. "You might read somewhere I'm a monkey and it doesn't mean I am ... I'm not prepared to talk about my private life. I don't really understand the fascination."
But if there's anything mainstream that Twigs is happy to talk about, it's motherhood. "Women are amazing creatures. We can give birth. We have a womb. We can create life! Are you kidding me? We can create life. Do you know what I mean? I honestly didn't give a s--t about any of this stuff until about two years ago. I don't know whether it's my age -- I'm going to be 28 in January -- but all of a sudden I started thinking that if I had a daughter, it is gonna be terrifying."
Coincidentally, Pattinson's ex-girlfriend, Kristen Stewart, also recently shared about her thoughts about aging, fame and life.
In an interview with Marie Claire, Stewart shared her challenging situation that started at an early age. "Between ages 15 and 20, it was really intense," the "Camp X-Ray" actress, 25, said. "I was constantly anxious. I was kind of a control freak. If I didn't know how something was going to turn out, I would make myself ill, or just be locked up or inhibited in a way that was really debilitating."
"At one point, you just let go and give yourself to your life. I have finally managed that and I get so much more out of life," Stewart continued. "I've lived hard for such a young person, and I've done that to myself -- but I've come out the other end not hardened but strong. I have an ability to persevere that I didn't have before. It's like when you fall on your face so hard. And the next time, you're like, 'Yeah, so? I've fallen on my face before.'"