'I don’t want to be anywhere except with her': Sienna Miller gushes over her daughter as she talks about motherhood having a bad rep
Over the years, the balance of work and family life has often shone a bad light on motherhood in the eyes of women.
But for Sienna Miller there was no feeling of compromise when she found out she was expecting.
And even with friends telling her not to become a mother, the actress believes her life is better for it.
She told the Radio Times: 'People told me not to have kids, but I think motherhood's got a bad rep.'
'I don't feel compromised. In fact, I don't want to be anywhere else except with her.'
Far from feeling the stress of having a newborn baby, the Hollywood star and her actor fiance Tom Sturridge have embraced the challenge of parenthood since Marlowe's birth in July.
'My life is really different, it's much better,' she gushed.
While Anthony Hopkins' Hitchcock movie premiered in London on Monday night, viewers will get a chance to see Sienna in HBO's TV biopic of the infamous film director this December on BBC2.
However, The Girl will focus on Hitchcock's obsessive relationship with actress Tippi Hedren, the star of horror classic The Birds.
'I think he wanted to create his ideal blonde, his ideal woman,” says Sienna. “He found this unknown so that he could mould her. Initially she trusted him. Then it started to get really weird.'
In preparation for the role, the 30-year old experienced a bird attack of her own, but by her own admission it wasn't as intense as the feathered barrage from the original movie.
'I did go through a bird attack for two hours. It pales in comparison to what she (Hedren) was subjected to, but it was pretty horrible," Sienna said.
'There were men off-camera with boxes of birds, throwing seagulls and pigeons in my face.'
As a high-profile actress herself, the similarities between the paparrazi hounding of Sienna and Hitchcock's control of Tippi are more than apparent: 'Initially that kind of attention is very flattering. Then the next thing you know there are people following you and you’re being asked what you’re doing out with this person.'
'Suddenly you’re into something you had no idea you were walking into, and it’s too late to get out.'
With that in mind it's no wonder Sienna has found motherly bliss with her little girl and fiance.
But for Sienna Miller there was no feeling of compromise when she found out she was expecting.
And even with friends telling her not to become a mother, the actress believes her life is better for it.
Doting mum: Sienna Miller has been defending motherhood after people told her not to have a kid
'I don't feel compromised. In fact, I don't want to be anywhere else except with her.'
Far from feeling the stress of having a newborn baby, the Hollywood star and her actor fiance Tom Sturridge have embraced the challenge of parenthood since Marlowe's birth in July.
Can't get enough: Sienna says she wouldn't want to be anywhere except with her baby girl
Bird: Sienna stars as Tippi Hedren in The Girl airing on BBC2 this Christmas
While Anthony Hopkins' Hitchcock movie premiered in London on Monday night, viewers will get a chance to see Sienna in HBO's TV biopic of the infamous film director this December on BBC2.
However, The Girl will focus on Hitchcock's obsessive relationship with actress Tippi Hedren, the star of horror classic The Birds.
'I think he wanted to create his ideal blonde, his ideal woman,” says Sienna. “He found this unknown so that he could mould her. Initially she trusted him. Then it started to get really weird.'
In preparation for the role, the 30-year old experienced a bird attack of her own, but by her own admission it wasn't as intense as the feathered barrage from the original movie.
'I did go through a bird attack for two hours. It pales in comparison to what she (Hedren) was subjected to, but it was pretty horrible," Sienna said.
'There were men off-camera with boxes of birds, throwing seagulls and pigeons in my face.'
As a high-profile actress herself, the similarities between the paparrazi hounding of Sienna and Hitchcock's control of Tippi are more than apparent: 'Initially that kind of attention is very flattering. Then the next thing you know there are people following you and you’re being asked what you’re doing out with this person.'
'Suddenly you’re into something you had no idea you were walking into, and it’s too late to get out.'
With that in mind it's no wonder Sienna has found motherly bliss with her little girl and fiance.
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