
The "V for Vendetta" star Natalie Portman believes that actresses who aim a Hollywoodian career in order to become rich are just as low as prostitutes. The actress also claims that she only accepts roles that are fit for her artistic talent and not necessarily roles that come along with a huge fee. So, money isn't the criteria to choose the movie to star in for Natalie.
"I don't want to ever be working for money because then you are no different to a prostitute," the screen beauty said. The "Star Wars'" actress also added that she's grateful for the chance she had going to college, and what a college… America's prestigious Harvard University! She said that the university experience taught her to have a life outside of Tinseltown.
Portman has praised before the importance of education, as saying that she would "rather be smart than a movie star". Britain's "Independent" newspaper quotes her as saying: "I have the most amazing friends in the world, who are doing such interesting and different things, and are their own people. They are my support base along with my parents. They are inspiring and always doing different, interesting things so I remember how to be a person by being around them. Like, you can play a person if you are a person in real life. It's hard to be like, 'I just pretend to be a human being on TV!' So the most important thing about college is that now I really have a life and I've got that forever."