Julia Lambert knows what acting is, what talent is, what she can control. She took a step back because she knew she could overcome: sneeze you can, you have the looks and clothes, the status is yours, and even praise all over the world, but this is only temporary. Her counterattack is so domineering, she turns into a queen when she puts on a shirt.
Her only weakness is indulging in feelings, and she voluntarily indulges herself. Knowing that the world is illusory, but still swallowing that seemingly fresh bait. Fortunately, she is an actress. She is used to disguise, and she pours out tears without red eyes: You are my only confidant. Maybe it is too understanding, so it is rare to be confused once!
She is a natural actress, her eyes and voice are made for acting.
My favorite is Roger Gosselyn: it looks the most irrelevant, but he actually understands the most. Since he could see his father's stealing love, he must also see his mother's love at that time. He clearly understands, but he wants to take it as a harmless betrayal of the person she loves to tell her mother, and his understanding of love. He knew what to say when and when, whether it was about love or telling about his father's rebellion. What he did was never meant to hurt his mother: You droped him, right? In the premiere, the two smiling faces with his mother had a warm power.
I love his laugh, whether meaningful or meaningless.
Micheal Gosselyn is also smart, he's after money, and a successful show is money. He was able to weigh in on Avice Crichtom's beautiful body and the talent of Julia Lambert's performance. Choose Avice Crichtom, sign Avice Crichtom, choose Julia Lambert: you are a monster.
It's just that his intelligence is too cold.
Lord Charles is also smart, he appreciates her talent, he needs her to keep her, even if she is an actor. He pays and he reaps: he loves her deeply, but he knows that he is not worthy of her naive love.
No matter how hot his smart looks, his heart is also cold: I play for the other side.
As for Avice Crichtom, she was smarter, but this time she miscalculated her opponent's weight. And Tom Fennel, he's probably never been smart.
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