We’ve sourced some of the most interesting and thought-provoking Kelly Macdonald Quotes. Each of the following quotes is overflowing with creativity, and knowledge.

I’m so not a celebrity.
It can get a bit boring working on accents.
I adore the fact that when I’m driving home from work, as soon as I hit my neighbourhood, I see people I know.
New Mexico was such a strange place; it was like filming on Mars.
I find just being on set embarrassing. Mortifying. And that’s with all my clothes on.
I get claustrophobic in a harness. I’d be a terrible superhero.
The people on programmes like ‘Made in Chelsea’ just want to be celebrities. It’s so depressing. No proper actor has that as a goal. I’m striving for longevity in my career.
I spent pretty much all my wages from ‘No Country For Old Men’ on a pair of cowboy boots. They’re ridiculous. It’s like wearing two Christmas trees on my legs.
I’ve done a few American accents. I’ve maybe passed a test. But I don’t know if it makes things easier or not.
I don’t lobby where work is concerned. As long as I know I’ve got something coming up, I don’t really worry. It’s not that I’m not ambitious, but I don’t have a drive to be hugely successful and be working all the time.
Sometimes I bite off a fingernail to use as a toothpick. Nasty.
I’m pretty happy with the two cities I call home now – Glasgow and New York. But I’d like to give Paris a shot.
They’re naughty, all those writers – they mess around with people. I know James Gandolfini got a bit fed up on ‘The Sopranos’: if he said anything in front of a writer, told them a story from his life, it could make its way into the script.
I tend to get cast as a certain type of quiet, almost introverted person who’s strong on the inside, but the characters are so very different I don’t see it as any kind of typecasting.
I thought I might not want to act any more after having a baby. It turns out I still enjoy it.
I properly enjoy what I do, but I know it’s not brain surgery. I don’t take myself too seriously.
Mine wasn’t a lakes-and-boats kind of childhood. I grew up on a Glasgow council estate with a single mother. For our holidays, we went to Grandma and Grandad’s caravan near Aberfoyle.
I was interested in drama, but it never seemed like a real profession somehow. It was so outside my experience, and I probably wouldn’t have had the confidence for drama school, though I did send off for an application form.
There was nobody in my family who knew anything about the film industry. I’m from the west of Scotland. It’s not exactly a mecca for filmmaking. I think I saw Rab C. Nesbitt in Asda once, but that was about it.
When I started acting I knew nothing. It was a momentous decision to pick up the flyer for the ‘Trainspotting’ audition. ‘Destined’ is a bit of a poncy word for it, but I do think I was headed in that direction.
I love that thing on Amazon that you can go on and order a book, and you click on it and it says, ‘You might also like,’ or ‘Other people who bought this have bought that.’
I’ve done TV and I’ve done film, and I’m not snobby about it. It’s about the project.
People don’t change very much, and the things life ends up being about don’t change from generation to generation. Life is about love. And people’s stories don’t really change. Your environment changes dramatically, technology changes, but people don’t change, in the way our minds work.
Being a parent is such a difficult business; you don’t always get things right. And also, you don’t want to be a perfect parent… You need people to be human, and part of it is imperfection.
I loved Winnie the Pooh, the Disney character, and I loved his wit and warmth.
What I’m normally associated with are darker, more brooding roles.
Watching films I’m in is always a bit odd, especially when I’m watching them for the first time with other people. It’s hard not to see my faults.
I’m no good at anecdotes.
It felt like a series of coincidences and luck that I ended up getting the part in ‘Trainspotting,’ but it’s been an incredible journey since then. Every now and then, I sit and really think about it, and it blows my mind. I have to stop because I don’t want my brain to implode.
Robert Altman was such an incredible person to have the privilege to know and meet and have dinner with.