You moved to Australia when you were 17 for university. What was that like?
Australia was so challenging to move to. An extremely cliquey city as it is so far away from much of the world. I felt very isolated, and it was so different from my other moves. I really missed my parents, my friends and, most of all, Thai culture.
I think the country still has a problem with accepting outsiders, and it definitely took me a very long time to find my people and feel settled. I’m grateful I stuck it out. I’ve been so lucky to have had a home base in two countries — my adoptive family in Australia and my folks back in Bangkok.
You have a sense of ease with your style. How did you come to develop it?
I love it when people say that because really, most days I’ll probably try three outfits before walking out the door, catch my reflection and go back and change another several times. On other days, I won’t have time to do all that and will just throw together the most mismatched random fit. Ironically, the latter usually looks better than the carefully curated looks.
What have you learnt from your time as an actress?
Such a big question! It’s still early days, I’m still learning. This, of course, isn’t exclusive to acting:
I’ve learned how, the more agency you get, the more inevitably uncomfortable it’ll make those around you — no matter how caring they are. But it's so much more meaningful and fulfilling when you do have agency. I’m really trying to get more comfortable exercising autonomy — it’s something I think, sadly, as women, we’re often vilified for. As difficult as it can be, it is worth it, that much I know.