Kristen Stewart Acknowledges She ‘Seemed Like An A**hole’ At The Height Of ‘Twilight’ Fame

Kristen Stewart didn't want fans to mistake her discomfort with 'celebrity-obsessed culture' for being an actual rebel. The 'Charlie's Angels' star explained why exactly she was 'really frustrated' while playing Bella Swan.

Kristen StewartView galleryKristen Stewart in the front row
Chanel show, Front Row, Fall Winter 2019, Paris Fashion Week, France - 05 Mar 2019Kristen Stewart is seen at the Martinez hotel during the 75th annual Cannes Film Festival on May 23, 2022 in Cannes, France.
Pictured: Kristen Stewart
Ref: SPL5313070 230522 NON-EXCLUSIVE
Picture by: SplashNews.com
Splash News and Pictures
USA: +1 310-525-5808
London: +44 (0)20 8126 1009
Berlin: +49 175 3764 166
World Rights, No Argentina Rights, No Belgium Rights, No Czechia Rights, No Finland Rights, No France Rights, No Germany Rights, No Italy Rights, No Mexico Rights, No Peru Rights, No Portugal Rights, No Spain Rights, No Switzerland Rights, No United Kingdom RightsKristen Stewart attends the 33rd Annual Producers Guild Awards at the Fairmont Century Plaza Hotel on in Los Angeles
33rd Annual Producers Guild Awards ' Cocktail Reception, Los Angeles, United States - 19 Mar 2022
Image Credit: Courtesy of Summit Entertainment

Kristen Stewart, 29, is renown for being the cool girl of Hollywood who doesn’t feed into tabloid culture, especially after her romance with co-star Robert Pattinson, 33, was forced into the spotlight during the hype of Twilight. But the actress saw how fans could’ve interpreted her wariness to the limelight for something worse. “I think I’ve grown out of this, but I used to be really frustrated that because I didn’t leap willingly into being at the center of a certain amount of attention, that it seemed like I was an a**hole,” Kristen admitted for her Sept. 2019 cover story with Vanity Fair. Pre-Twilight, Kristen already had roles in big budget flicks like Zathura: A Space Adventure and Into the Wild, but her role as Bella Swan made her a household name.

Explaining her seemingly brooding nature, Kristen further explained, “I am in no way rebellious. I am in no way contrarian. I just want people to like me.” After the last entry into the Twilight saga hit theaters in 2012 (Breaking Dawn – Part 2), Kristen took a different route and opted for movies of the indie and art house variety like Certain Women (directed by Kelly Reichardt) and Personal Shopper (directed by Olivier Assayas). Kristen found her voice in these smaller films, as she told Vanity Fair, “It gave me a chance to not weigh something down. It was so much bigger than me. My baggage was so minuscule in comparison to what [Reichardt’s and Assayas’s] story lines are, as filmmakers. I was finally given a chance to be looked at, not as this thing in this celebrity-obsessed culture that was like, ‘Oh, that’s the girl from Twilight.’”

Kristen is making her return to mainstream cinema now, as she’s starring in the Charlie’s Angels reboot alongside Naomi Scott and Ella Balinska, which is directed by Elizabeth Banks! The action flick will premiere on Nov. 15, and even Kristen’s ex and fellow vampire star is excited to see Kristen in this high-profile role. “Rob is very excited for Kristen,” a source close to the High Life star EXCLUSIVELY told HollywoodLife. “He’s hearing good things about the movie and will for sure watch it. Rob thinks Kristen is so talented and he’s glad to see her taking on such a huge, iconic role. He’s proud of her.”

Kristen Stewart
Kristen Stewart in the last installment of ‘The Twilight Saga,’ which played in theaters in 2012. (Courtesy of Summit Entertainment)

Even Rob has reflected on the Twilight craze of the late aughts in a recent interview. “It seems like with younger people in their late teens, early 20s, it’s sort of become quite a hip thing to like,” the actor for Edward Cullen mused in an interview with USA Today in April 2019. “It’s a fascinating second wave of people appreciating it, which is kind of cool. I think when anything becomes a massive phenomenon, there’s always people who get annoyed because it’s just everywhere. But now it seems like a retro thing: the soundtrack, the fashion. It’s like, ‘Oh, that’s so late 2000s.’”

You Might Also Like