Margot Robbie ‘faked own death’ in hilarious prank

Margot Robbie ‘faked own death’ in hilarious prank

It appears Margot Robbie has been honing her performing craft since manner earlier than she made it huge in Australia and abroad.

The Aussie actress admits she had all the time been a dramatic baby, as soon as even staging her personal demise to prank her babysitter on the time.

Appearing on BBC Radio 2’s The Zoe Ball Breakfast Show with Barbie co-star Ryan Gosling, Robbie recalled scheming up a solution to scare a brand new babysitter she didn’t like.

“We got a new babysitter and I wanted my old babysitter back, Talia, who was like 16 and I thought she was so cool,” Robbie mentioned on this system, which was recorded earlier than the SAG–AFTRA actors’ strike in Hollywood.

Margot Robbie reveals elaborate prank on childhood babysitter

“We got this much older lady in and I was just not happy about it, and she told me to go have a bath and I didn’t want to and she was very cranky and I thought, ‘I’m going to show you.’”

So Robbie acquired a knife and “sprawled out naked on the tiles” within the kitchen of her Queensland house earlier than overlaying herself with tomato sauce.

She recalled laying there for an extended time frame ready for the babysitter to search out her, however mentioned it was price each second to look at the sitter run from the home, screaming.

“I waited like 45 minutes for her to find me,” she added. “But it was worth the wait.”

Gosling, 42, then joked that Robbie had “produced [her] own death”.

In the interview, the previous Neighbours star admitted she had tendencies to faux accidents as a toddler.

“I also once practised like a pratfall on the cinema stairs at the shopping centre where I’m from and people called an ambulance. So I guess I was a bit of a dramatic child,” she joked.

Despite being completely forged as Barbie within the newly launched stay motion movie, Robbie mentioned she was extra of a prankster than a Barbie lady rising up in her native Queensland.

“I didn’t personally have any [Barbies] that I can recall,” she lately instructed People journal.

“My sister did and I remember my cousin did. I would play with my cousin’s, but I wasn’t actually that much of a Barbie girl as a kid. I was more of a roll-around-in-the-mud kind of gal.”

Source: www.news.com.au