Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Lindsay Lohan on Vanity Fair

Lindsay Lohan appears on the September 2010 cover of Vanity Fair magazine. Check it out above!

On her career:
"I want my career back. I want the respect that I had when I was doing great movies. And if that takes not going out to a club at night, then so be it. It's not fun anyway.

On her past:
I don't care what anyone says. I know that I'm a damn good actress. … And I know that in my past I was young and irresponsible-but that's what growing up is. You learn from your mistakes.

On rumors that she's an alcoholic:
"If I were the alcoholic everyone says I am, then putting a [SCRAM] bracelet on would have ended me up in detox, in the emergency room, because I would have had to come down from all the things that people say I'm taking and my father says I'm taking-so that says something, because I was fine. I think everyone has their own addictions and hopefully learns how to get past them"

On her father:
"I think my biggest focus for myself is learning how to continue to get through the trauma that my father has caused in my life."

On her alleged drug use:
"I've never abused prescription drugs. I never have-never in my life. I have no desire to. That's not who I am. I've admitted to the things that I've done-to, you know, dabbling in certain things and trying things ’cause I was young and curious and thought it was like, O.K., ’cause other people were doing it and other people put it in front of me. And I see what happened in my life because of it."

On the courtroom drama:
It was "hearbreaking" see Ali cry. "The worst part of it is you turn around and you see your dad crying and normally you’d be, like, happy that your father’s there. But then he has to go and do an interview right after."

On hanging out with the wrong crowd:
“So many people around me would say they cared for the wrong reasons. A lot of people were pulling from me, taking from me and not giving. I had a lot of people that were there for me for, you know, the party.”

On first moving to El Lay:
"It was very go-go-go and I had a lot of responsibility; and I think just the second I didn’t have [structure] anymore—I was 18, 19—with a ton of money and no one really here to tell me that I couldn’t do certain things … And I see where that’s gotten me now, and I don’t like it.” The tabloids were “really scary and sad… I would look up to those girls… the Britneys and whatever. And I would be like, I want to be like that.”

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