Photo: Amy Sussman/GettyFamke Janssenis hanging tight to her true self while navigating her Hollywood career.TheX-MenandTakenactress, 57, opened up toThe Independentabout tending to be “super private” and that she “realized a long time ago that I don’t really like people knowing anything about me.““I feel incredibly misunderstood at times. It’s the dichotomy between the way I look and what is happening inside,” she said. “But that comes with being in a Bond movie and playing this crazy assassin. All of my friends and family know that I’m goofy and sensitive and that I play these characters who are so different from that. Other people probably think I’m just playing myself.“Janssen played Xenia Onatopp in 1995’sGoldenEyeoppositePierce Brosnan’s James Bond.She said that after her breakout role in that film, she “felt like I was thrown to the wolves” with media attention as she “had to deal with the stereotype of” being a “model turned actress turned Bond Girl.“Pierce Brosnan and Famke Janssen inGoldenEye(1995).Keith Hamshere/GettyNever miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free weekly newsletterto get the biggest news of the week delivered to your inbox every Friday.“It was just an onslaught of attention, good and bad and everything in between. I realize every actor in the world thinks they can control the press, but ultimately the press always wins,” said Janssen. “I decided I’d rather be less famous and do things on my terms.“She added, “That means I don’t make as much money as other people do. I don’t date famous people. I’m not on social media…. But fame comes at a price, and it wasn’t one that I was willing to pay.“Janssen explained to The Independent that she came “from nothing” and is “self-made” — “This whole notion that I’m some kind of glamorous movie star is not remotely true,” she said.“It was a very conscious decision to take a different path. I had to create longevity for myself and work on my craft. I would have been much more famous and made much more money if I’d just gone with whatever was given to me in those moments. But that’s never been the way that I do things.“Famke Janssen atGoldenEyein November 1995.BOB STRONG/AFP via GettyTheactress told PEOPLE back in 2015about howGoldenEye"propelled me into the business.““There’s always a catch-22 with these types of movies because historically women have just been categorized or demeaned in whatever ways in these films, so I was very clear about what as a woman it was like to be part of that franchise and what could potentially happen after that,” she said at the time.Janssen added that she thought the Bond movies had adapted to be more socially aware and less stereotypical in its depictions of women.“I’m really happy that, especially with a vehicle in the Bond genre, which really traditionally hasn’t been very kind to its women, that I’ve had maybe, hopefully, the tiniest little bit of an effect,” she said at the time. “That those women could be strong and different and unique and that’s what I tried to do with the parts that come my way.”
Photo: Amy Sussman/Getty

Famke Janssenis hanging tight to her true self while navigating her Hollywood career.TheX-MenandTakenactress, 57, opened up toThe Independentabout tending to be “super private” and that she “realized a long time ago that I don’t really like people knowing anything about me.““I feel incredibly misunderstood at times. It’s the dichotomy between the way I look and what is happening inside,” she said. “But that comes with being in a Bond movie and playing this crazy assassin. All of my friends and family know that I’m goofy and sensitive and that I play these characters who are so different from that. Other people probably think I’m just playing myself.“Janssen played Xenia Onatopp in 1995’sGoldenEyeoppositePierce Brosnan’s James Bond.She said that after her breakout role in that film, she “felt like I was thrown to the wolves” with media attention as she “had to deal with the stereotype of” being a “model turned actress turned Bond Girl.“Pierce Brosnan and Famke Janssen inGoldenEye(1995).Keith Hamshere/GettyNever miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free weekly newsletterto get the biggest news of the week delivered to your inbox every Friday.“It was just an onslaught of attention, good and bad and everything in between. I realize every actor in the world thinks they can control the press, but ultimately the press always wins,” said Janssen. “I decided I’d rather be less famous and do things on my terms.“She added, “That means I don’t make as much money as other people do. I don’t date famous people. I’m not on social media…. But fame comes at a price, and it wasn’t one that I was willing to pay.“Janssen explained to The Independent that she came “from nothing” and is “self-made” — “This whole notion that I’m some kind of glamorous movie star is not remotely true,” she said.“It was a very conscious decision to take a different path. I had to create longevity for myself and work on my craft. I would have been much more famous and made much more money if I’d just gone with whatever was given to me in those moments. But that’s never been the way that I do things.“Famke Janssen atGoldenEyein November 1995.BOB STRONG/AFP via GettyTheactress told PEOPLE back in 2015about howGoldenEye"propelled me into the business.““There’s always a catch-22 with these types of movies because historically women have just been categorized or demeaned in whatever ways in these films, so I was very clear about what as a woman it was like to be part of that franchise and what could potentially happen after that,” she said at the time.Janssen added that she thought the Bond movies had adapted to be more socially aware and less stereotypical in its depictions of women.“I’m really happy that, especially with a vehicle in the Bond genre, which really traditionally hasn’t been very kind to its women, that I’ve had maybe, hopefully, the tiniest little bit of an effect,” she said at the time. “That those women could be strong and different and unique and that’s what I tried to do with the parts that come my way.”
Famke Janssenis hanging tight to her true self while navigating her Hollywood career.
TheX-MenandTakenactress, 57, opened up toThe Independentabout tending to be “super private” and that she “realized a long time ago that I don’t really like people knowing anything about me.”
“I feel incredibly misunderstood at times. It’s the dichotomy between the way I look and what is happening inside,” she said. “But that comes with being in a Bond movie and playing this crazy assassin. All of my friends and family know that I’m goofy and sensitive and that I play these characters who are so different from that. Other people probably think I’m just playing myself.”
Janssen played Xenia Onatopp in 1995’sGoldenEyeoppositePierce Brosnan’s James Bond.
She said that after her breakout role in that film, she “felt like I was thrown to the wolves” with media attention as she “had to deal with the stereotype of” being a “model turned actress turned Bond Girl.”
Pierce Brosnan and Famke Janssen inGoldenEye(1995).Keith Hamshere/Getty

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free weekly newsletterto get the biggest news of the week delivered to your inbox every Friday.
“It was just an onslaught of attention, good and bad and everything in between. I realize every actor in the world thinks they can control the press, but ultimately the press always wins,” said Janssen. “I decided I’d rather be less famous and do things on my terms.”
She added, “That means I don’t make as much money as other people do. I don’t date famous people. I’m not on social media…. But fame comes at a price, and it wasn’t one that I was willing to pay.”
Janssen explained to The Independent that she came “from nothing” and is “self-made” — “This whole notion that I’m some kind of glamorous movie star is not remotely true,” she said.
“It was a very conscious decision to take a different path. I had to create longevity for myself and work on my craft. I would have been much more famous and made much more money if I’d just gone with whatever was given to me in those moments. But that’s never been the way that I do things.”
Famke Janssen atGoldenEyein November 1995.BOB STRONG/AFP via Getty

Theactress told PEOPLE back in 2015about howGoldenEye"propelled me into the business.”
“There’s always a catch-22 with these types of movies because historically women have just been categorized or demeaned in whatever ways in these films, so I was very clear about what as a woman it was like to be part of that franchise and what could potentially happen after that,” she said at the time.
Janssen added that she thought the Bond movies had adapted to be more socially aware and less stereotypical in its depictions of women.
“I’m really happy that, especially with a vehicle in the Bond genre, which really traditionally hasn’t been very kind to its women, that I’ve had maybe, hopefully, the tiniest little bit of an effect,” she said at the time. “That those women could be strong and different and unique and that’s what I tried to do with the parts that come my way.”
source: people.com