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  • Translator: Cihan Ekmekçi; Reviewer: Leonardo Silva.

  • Hi.

  • I'm Maisie Williams.

  • And I'm kind of just waiting for someone to come on stage

  • and tell me that there's been some sort of miscommunication,

  • and that I should probably leave.

  • No?

  • Damn it.

  • (Laughter)

  • So, some of you may know me as an actress.

  • (Cheers) (Laughter)

  • Some of you may know me for my really average tweets.

  • (Cheers)

  • Oh, yeah.

  • And some of you may be finding out who I am for the first time right now.

  • Hello.

  • Whether you knew me before or not,

  • you're probably wondering what I'm going to talk to you about today.

  • And I would be lying if I said

  • it didn't take me one or two sleepless nights,

  • trying to figure that out, too.

  • At last, here I am.

  • Upon finding out the news that I would be giving a TEDx Talk,

  • I did what I think most people do

  • and watched about 50 TED talks back-to-back,

  • and readTalk like TEDby Carmine Gallo for some inspiration.

  • Was I inspired?

  • Yes and no.

  • Did it make me want to go out and change the world?

  • Hell yeah.

  • Did it make me feel like a totally inadequate public speaker

  • with absolutely no point to make,

  • who was definitely in need of a big thesaurus if she wants to keep up?

  • Indeed.

  • What could I possibly say that would have any impact?

  • What point am I trying to make?

  • And who the hell thought it was a good idea to give me a TEDx talk?

  • So here's the part where I tell you what I know.

  • I'm the youngest of four siblings.

  • My parents divorced when I was four months old.

  • I really was the icing on the cake of a terrible marriage.

  • (Laughter)

  • I have two step siblings who are younger than me

  • and a half brother who's older than all of us.

  • I grew up in a three-bedroom council house

  • with four of my six siblings just outside of Bristol.

  • I went to a very ordinary school.

  • I got very ordinary grades.

  • I wasn't quite good enough to get a gold star,

  • and I also wasn't quite bad enough to be kept after school.

  • I walked that nice center line where if I kept my mouth shut in class,

  • then I could probably get away

  • with not being spoken to you by teachers for weeks on end.

  • Everything about me was pretty damn ordinary,

  • except for how I felt on the inside.

  • I had big dreams.

  • Shock.

  • From as young as I can remember,

  • I have dreamed of becoming a professional dancer.

  • There are certain memories from my childhood

  • that I would really rather forget.

  • But during those times of immense pain,

  • I found myself instinctively walking over to my mother's CD player,

  • cranking up the volume to drown out the noise

  • and letting my body move to the beat.

  • It's hard to describe how it felt.

  • I was harnessing emotions that I didn't even really know the names of yet.

  • I was summoning all of this energy

  • and feeling it flow through my body and out of my fingertips.

  • I was alone in my own head, and I felt the most alive.

  • I didn't really know much about the big wide world then,

  • but I knew that this feeling was addictive;

  • and I was going to stop at nothing until I made it my profession.

  • At eight years old, I was enrolled in dance class.

  • And by ten, I informed my mother

  • that I didn't want to go to school anymore.

  • I wanted to be like Billy Elliot and go to stage school.

  • This was the first opportunity or challenge I was presented with.

  • Even as young as ten,

  • I was willing to give up all of my friends and go away to board at a private school,

  • away from my siblings, away from my mom.

  • She would repeatedly ask me, "Are you sure this is what you want?"

  • And to me, it was a no-brainer.

  • I didn't just want this; I needed it.

  • My grubby knees and crooked teeth were not on the list of requirements

  • for becoming a professional dancer.

  • And when I look back now,

  • both myself and my mother looked severely out of place.

  • But at the time, I was just too young and naive to feel inadequate.

  • I didn't care.

  • If Billy Elliot could do it, so could I.

  • Once my audition was done, I returned home for two weeks of staring out the window,

  • waiting for the postman,

  • waiting for my ticket out of my sleepy village

  • and into a world of jazz hands and dorm rooms.

  • It was good news followed by bad new.

  • I had got in, but the fees to attend a school like this were not cheap,

  • and despite my best efforts, I had not received any government funding.

  • I auditioned again the following year.

  • And this time, I received 40% funding,

  • but this was still just money that we didn't have,

  • and it broke my heart.

  • I was good enough.

  • I made the cut.

  • But I wasn't going anywhere.

  • It was a blessing in disguise,

  • although if anyone had said that to me back then,

  • I probably would've given them the finger and told them to jog on.

  • I wasn't willing to give up that easily.

  • So at age 11, I was bursting with excitement

  • when my dance teacher informed me of a talent show

  • which boasted opportunities of making you a star.

  • This was the second opportunity I was faced with.

  • I entered into singing, acting,

  • dancing and modeling.

  • The talent show consisted of workshops and seminars

  • with specialists who would help train you up for your performance

  • at the end of the week.

  • After meeting a woman called Louise Johnston

  • in an improvisation acting workshop,

  • she gave me the words "bowling ball",

  • and asked me to create a short scene inspired by these words.

  • After making her laugh with a fictional story,

  • of how I threw a bowling ball at my brother and it bounced,

  • she asked me to join her acting agency.

  • I didn't really know what this meant.

  • I knew that I would do auditions for films and maybe become an actor,

  • but I still had big dreams of becoming a professional dancer,

  • so this woman was going to have to work a lot harder than that

  • if she was going to convince eleven-year-old me

  • that I was going to become an actress.

  • Was this going to take time away

  • from the 30 hours of dancing I was doing a week?

  • And what if I didn't get the part?

  • Was this going to be too upsetting?

  • And do actresses have teeth like mine?

  • Because if they do, I'm yet to watch any of their movies.

  • After meeting Louise in the February of 2009

  • and trying but failing to land the part

  • in the hit sequel "Nanny McPhee and The Big Bang",

  • my second audition was for a show called "Game of Thrones".

  • This was the third opportunity or challenge I was presented with.

  • I climbed the steps to the Methodist Church

  • with my mother's hand in mine.

  • I perched my tiny bottom in one of the seats outside the audition room

  • and listened to an annoying girl with her even more annoying mother

  • tell me all about the number of auditions she had done prior to this one.

  • And also about her pet fish.

  • My name was called, then I stepped inside.

  • I had a hard Bristolian accent

  • and dark rings around my eyes that were so big they took up half my face

  • and a hole in the knee of my trousers which I tried to cover with my left hand

  • as I was talking to the kind lady who taped my audition.

  • But as soon as she pressed record,

  • it all drifted away.

  • Much like when I was dancing in my mother's living room,

  • I harnessed all of my insecurities and self-doubt

  • and let it flow through the words that came out of my mouth.

  • I was cheeky.

  • I was loud.

  • I was angry.

  • And for this, I was perfect.

  • After getting the part and shooting the pilot episode,

  • the show slowly grew

  • to become one of the biggest shows in television history.

  • To this day, we've smashed previous HBO viewing records.

  • We've been nominated for over 130 Emmys,

  • making us the most Emmy-nominated show to ever exist.

  • We've recently finished shooting our eighth and final season,

  • which is predicted to smash records that we've already broken.

  • And nearly a decade to the day since my first audition,

  • I'm still wondering,

  • when am I going to get to be Billy Elliot?

  • (Laughter)

  • I joke, but in all seriousness, I have absolutely no plans of slowing down.

  • Throughout my time in this industry, it has been a minefield.

  • I have grown from a child into an adult,

  • and from four feet tall into a whopping five feet tall.

  • (Laughter)

  • I have constantly been trying to say the right thing,

  • accidentally saying the wrong thing,

  • trying not to swear too much

  • and trying to stop saying "like, like" all of the time.

  • In February of 2017,

  • a friend of mine, Dom, and I were swigging beers in my kitchen,

  • and he confessed to me

  • that there is a huge problem with the creative industries.

  • I agreed.

  • The series of events that had got me to that point

  • were based mainly on luck and timing and were unable to be recreated.

  • He suggested to me that we create a social media,

  • but just for artists to be able to collaborate with one another

  • and create a career.

  • This was the fourth opportunity or challenge I was presented with.

  • "Great," I thought.

  • "How the hell do we do that?"

  • And Daisy was born.

  • Of course, everyone who I spoke to about my latest endeavor thought that I was mad;

  • however, I know that this is something that I can help change.

  • This last year in the industry, we've seen a huge shift with the Me Too movement.

  • The industry is built with gatekeepers holding all of the power

  • and selecting who they deem talented enough to advance to the next level.

  • More often than not, it's easier to catch the attention of those people

  • if you have graduated from an expensive school.

  • But even then, I have so many friends who are fresh out of art school,

  • having trained for years and are still no closer to creating a career.

  • Now, I'm not claiming that with Daisy I can make everybody a star,

  • but I do believe

  • that the key to success within creative industries is collaborating.

  • Actors are only as good as their writers.

  • Musicians are only as strong as their producers.

  • And designers need their teams.

  • To start the company, we self-funded.

  • I had a pot of cash from "Game of Thrones"

  • that I was free to invest wherever I liked.

  • Dom had a series of businesses from the age of 16,

  • which meant he was also left with a pot of cash.

  • We threw our money together 50-50, and we built a team.

  • Now, Lady Gaga has repeatedly said

  • that there could be a room of 100 people, and 99 don't believe in you,

  • but it just takes that one person to believe in you,

  • and they can change your life.

  • Well, now we have a team of six.

  • Over the next 16 months, we built our MVP.

  • Now, if you're wondering what an MVP is,

  • I only found out what it is about six months ago.

  • And from what I can gather, it's a product which proves as a problem worth solving

  • with the minimum team effort.

  • So basically from my point of view, you're marketing something

  • which you know is going to be good one day,

  • but is a little bit bad right now.

  • And for us, that was an iOS app.

  • The six of us made an office in Dom's garden,

  • and on August 1, 2018, we released our version one.

  • We had over 30,000 downloads in the first 24 hours

  • and over 30,000 comments

  • asking when the Android version was going to be coming.

  • Despite our app being imperfect, buggy and literally built by one man alone,

  • this was exactly what we needed for people to invest.

  • We learned a lot from our angry users and our scary investors.

  • And over the last six months, we have grown our team to 16 people.

  • From then till now, we've been building version two,

  • which we will be launching in April.

  • Within the industry,

  • there is a common phrase which I think we're all pretty familiar with.

  • And that is, "It's not what you know, it's who you know."

  • And with Daisy, I hope to give that power back to the creator.

  • I want to encourage people to create a list of contacts

  • that they will work with and support as they take their first steps

  • into the fickle and often challenging creative world.

  • I am of the generation who grew up with the Internet.

  • I've never known anything else.

  • We are connected, we are aware, and we are the future.

  • I hope Daisy can breathe new life

  • into the slightly dystopian, ad-riddled hellscapes

  • that social media platforms have become.

  • I hope to create a space where people can boast their art and creativity

  • rather than what car they are driving

  • and whether or not they bought it in cash or on finance.

  • In a world where literally anyone can be famous,

  • I hope to inspire people to be talented instead.

  • Talent will carry you so much further than your 15 minutes of fame.

  • So why am I telling you all this?

  • The very fact that I'm here giving a TEDx talk right now

  • is so far from anything I thought that I was capable of.

  • Even writing the bio for my speech made me realize

  • that in a decade, everything in my life has changed.

  • I am an Emmy-nominated actress, an entrepreneur and an activist;

  • yet I have no formal qualifications to my name.

  • When I left school about seven years ago, I made it my mission to continue learning

  • even though I never wanted to set foot in a classroom again.

  • Who knows what's going to happen to my life in the next 10 years?

  • I surely have no idea.

  • I've never had an end goal.

  • It's working out okay so far.

  • So trust that you're good enough.

  • If there's one thing that I've learned is that there truly is a place for everyone.

  • Ask questions,

  • and laugh in the face of people who say that they're stupid questions.

  • Be open to learning and admitting

  • when you don't know what the hell is going on.

  • Refuse to hold yourself back,

  • and dare to dream big.

  • Thank you for listening.

  • (Applause)

Translator: Cihan Ekmekçi; Reviewer: Leonardo Silva.

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有名になろうと努力するのではなく、才能を発揮しようと努力しましょう|メイジー・ウィリアムズ|TEDxManchester (Don't strive to be famous, strive to be talented | Maisie Williams | TEDxManchester)

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