June 19, 2011

Harry Potter's Bonnie Wright is unrecognisable as she poses on sexy magazine cover

She shot to fame playing little Ginny Weasley in the Harry Potter movies.

But Bonnie Wright has shown once and for all that she is all grown-up, after posing on the cover of Haute Muse magazine.

The 20-year-old actress is virtually unrecognisable as she dons dark eyeshadow and plum-coloured lipstick, which beautifully complements her red hair, for the cover.

The cover is the latest move by Bonnie to distance herself from the schoolgirl character of Ginny after she finishes promoting the final movie in the franchise, Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows: Part II.

Next up for Bonnie is an independent film called The Philosophers, which will see the young actress travel to Indonesia for the shoot.

She said recently: 'I’m off in Indonesia to film the movie.

'It’s set in an international school in Jakarta, and it’s about this philosophy class.

'The film takes this amazing turn where it becomes a psychological thriller.

'So, the character I’m playing is outgoing, and she’s quite fashion-forward and quite cool in the classroom, but she’s very outspoken, so I’m very excited about that because Ginny was always quiet.'

Bonnie, who is engaged to Twilight star Jamie Campbell-Bower, said recently that she won't be looking to star in a franchise after the end of the Harry Potter movies.

She said: 'I’ve always admired actresses like Cate Blanchett and Nicole Kidman - especially for her work in Moulin Rouge and The Hours - but I’ve never really fixated on anyone and thought, “I want to do exactly what they’ve done.”

'I really just want to do my own thing.'

Before that, Ginny will have to say goodbye to Harry Potter in the final film, which will see her and Harry marry and have three children - two sons named James and Albus and a daughter called Lily.

And, in a recent interview, Bonnie discussed what it was like to meet her 'future children'.

'The three kids who played the children were just… they just epitomised all of us, when we were that age, so it was lovely to look back,' she said.

'In the auditioning process Dan and I sat down with different children and talked to them, because obviously the dynamic is incredibly important… to try and portray the idea that they are this family unit, that they’ve spent every living moment together, since they were babies in their hands to how they are now.

'It was challenging to get that warmth with someone you’ve barely met and some children don’t want to get close to someone they don’t know.

'But they understood it was incredibly important to make the scene work, so they were very giving to the situation.'
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