It all started when I was 4. I was watching a lot of 'The Little Mermaid,' and I loved that movie. I was going around the house singing - I wanted to be on Disney and everything; I wanted to be a princess.
I've never been to New Zealand before. But one of my role models, Xena, the warrior princess, comes from there.
I wanted to be Beetlejuice. I watched nonstop 'Beetlejuice' and 'The Princess Bride' growing up.
Marry Prince William? I'd love that. Who wouldn't want to be a princess?
I was too shy to go and meet Princess Diana.
For much of the final decade of the 20th century, one story regularly dominated the news across much of the developed world. It was the unravelling of the marriage between the heir to the British throne and his beautiful, charismatic princess, Diana.
I was in Boston, Massachusetts, when Princess Diana died.
I think Princess Diana probably had the most famous haircut, or Farrah Fawcett or Jennifer Aniston.
I went from being a jobbing actress who was just earning a living to being the second most photographed woman in Britain, next to Princess Diana - but it was exciting, too, and I wouldn't have swapped it for a second.
I never dreamt to be a princess in my life; I really dreamt to be an actress, but I dreamt of princesses on screen.
I'm not a princess. My mother is, not I. I am the niece of a head of state. And with this status, I have some representational duties - nothing very constraining or very exceptional.
Before he played CIA Director Saul Berenson on 'Homeland,' a much younger Mandy Patinkin gained some fame as Inigo Montoya, a legendary swordsman, in 'The Princess Bride.'
There is no place in a city that can't be better. There is no toad that can't be a princess, no frog that can't become a prince.
I always finish off my look with a spritz of Vera Wang Pink Princess.