Bonnie Wright, known for her role as Ginny Weasley in the Harry Potter series, recently opened up about the limited screen time her character received throughout the films. She shared her thoughts on the Inside of You podcast, and with a hint of disappointment pointed out the challenges of portraying the character in condensed movie adaptations.
“I definitely feel there was anxiety towards performing and doing the best thing as my character built, for instance,” Wright said (via Insider). “Like, ‘Oh gosh, will I do justice to this character that people love?’ So that was always hard to do, especially when, inevitably, a lot of the scenes of every character were chopped down from the book to the film. So you didn’t really have as much to show in the film.”
Wright added, “Sometimes that was a little disappointing because there were parts of the character that just didn’t get to come through because there weren’t the scenes to do that. That made me feel a bit anxious or just frustrated, I guess.”
Wright’s portrayal of Ginny began when she was nine years old in the 2001 release of the first movie, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. She admitted that during filming, she couldn’t anticipate Ginny’s eventual marriage to Harry, as not all the books were published at that point.
Regarding her involvement in the filmmaking process, Wright mentioned that discussions about expanding Ginny’s role didn’t occur due to the rigid constraints of the scripts. “There were a million executives going through them all,” Wright said. “I think what I maybe took, which I don’t take so much to heart now, is I kind of felt that maybe my anxiety was about, ‘Oh, I’m going to be seen as badly portraying this character,’ rather than later realizing that I wasn’t really given the opportunity to do that. So it wasn’t really my fault, exactly.”
As Harry Potter’s story is due to continue in the upcoming TV series in the works for Max, Daniel Radcliffe reaffirmed that he plans to pass the torch instead of lobbying to play the role again.
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