Evanna Patricia Lynch (born 16 August 1991[1]) is an Irish actress and activist. She is best known for portraying Luna Lovegood in the Harry Potter film series.
Evanna Lynch | |
---|---|
Born | Evanna Patricia Lynch 16 August 1991 Termonfeckin, County Louth, Ireland |
Education | Our Lady's College, Greenhills, Drogheda Centre for Talented Youth Institute of Education |
Occupations |
|
Years active | 2006–present |
Height | 158 cm (5 ft 2 in) |
Relatives | Declan Kiberd (uncle) Damien Kiberd (uncle) |
Born in County Louth, Ireland, Lynch made her film debut in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (2007), reprising her role in successive sequels to critical praise, concluding with Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 (2011) and series parody A Very Potter Senior Year (2012). Lynch appeared in G.B.F. (2013), which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival to positive reviews. She made her stage debut in Houdini as Bess Houdini, which toured the UK in 2013. Lynch starred in the indie drama My Name Is Emily, which premiered at the 2015 Galway Film Fleadh to critical acclaim. In 2017, Lynch starred in revival of Disco Pigs at the Trafalgar Theatre in London. In 2018, she competed on season 27 of Dancing with the Stars, placing third. She went on to star in the British stage adaptation of The Omission of the Family Coleman at the Theatre Royal, Bath in 2019.
As an activist, Lynch advocates for veganism and animal rights. She has been involved with several non-profit organisations and launched both a vegan-themed podcast and the cruelty-free cosmetics brand Kinder Beauty Box.
Early life and education
editEvanna Patricia Lynch was born on 16 August 1991 to Marguerite and Donal Lynch and was raised in Termonfeckin, County Louth, on the east coast of Ireland.[1][2] She has two older sisters and a younger brother.[3] Her maternal uncle is Declan Kiberd, a scholar of Irish literature who is a professor at the University of Notre Dame.[4] Lynch was raised a Catholic.[5]
Lynch read the Harry Potter series for the first time at age eight and became a fan,[6][7][8] reading and writing fan fiction about the series[6] and sending letters to the author, J. K. Rowling.[1] She was educated at Cartown National School in Termonfeckin until June 2004 and then moved to Our Lady's College in Drogheda,[2][7] where her father was the deputy principal.[9][10] In 2008, she studied speculative fiction and drama at the Centre for the Talented Youth of Ireland, a summer school for gifted teens, in Glasnevin.[11][12] While on the Harry Potter film set, Lynch was tutored for at least three hours a day.[13] In September 2010, she attended the Institute of Education to repeat her Leaving Certificate.[14]
Lynch developed an eating disorder at age eleven. She was hospitalised several times for anorexia, and stated that the Harry Potter novels were the only thing that could distract from her condition. During this period, she often wrote to Rowling, stating that "her books and her kindness really made me want to live again."[15] Rowling wrote then- 11-year-old Lynch "incredible, wise letters" back.[16] During the release of the fifth book Order of the Phoenix in June 2003, Lynch was hospitalised and her family consulted with the book's publisher and the hospital; she was subsequently allowed to leave for an hour and collect a signed copy of the book.[17]
Career
edit2006–2011: Beginnings and Harry Potter series
editIn January 2006, Lynch auditioned at a casting call in London for the role of Luna Lovegood in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, the fifth film in the series adapted from the books.[18][19] After auditioning against 15,000 other girls,[18] and a subsequent screen test with lead actor Daniel Radcliffe, she was cast at age 14.[13] Producers were impressed with her affinity for the character; David Heyman said: "The others could play Luna; Evanna Lynch is Luna."[20] Although uninvolved in the casting process, Rowling believed that Lynch was perfect for the role.[21] She had never acted professionally before the Harry Potter series, her experience having been limited to school plays.[22] While filming Harry Potter, Lynch also made and helped design a number of fashion accessories for her character.[10][23][24][25]
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix was Lynch's debut screen performance in 2007. The film was a box office hit and garnered favourable reviews.[26][27] Critics praised the performances of the supporting cast; Lynch was often singled out for acclaim: The New York Times called her performance "spellbinding",[28] and Jane Watkins of Country Life said she "[brought] an appealing sweetness to her character that's not so developed in the book".[29] She also voiced the character in the film's tie-in video game.[30] Lynch reprised her role in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (2009). The film was critically and commercially successful.[31][32] Wesley Morris of The Boston Globe wrote that Lynch "combats the movie's occasional sluggishness with a hilarious sluggishness of her own",[33] and Michael Dwyer of The Irish Times called her the best Irish actress of 2009 for her work on the film.[34] Her performance earned her Scream Award and Young Artist Award nominations,[35][36] and she returned in the film's tie-in video game.[37]
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1 was released in 2010 to positive reviews and box office success.[38][39] The Boston Herald commented that Lynch "is still delightfully lunar,"[40] while Quickflix criticised the film, noting that "the delightful Evanna Lynch is brutally underutilised".[41] She reprised her role in the film's tie-in video game.[42] Lynch appeared in the role for the final time in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2. The film opened to critical acclaim and went on to become the fifth highest-grossing film of all time.[43][44] The Seattle Times wrote that Lynch "continues to be all-that-and-a-radish-earring as the ever-wafting Luna Lovegood,"[45] and Orlando Sentinel named her as "maybe" one of his "favourite players in the finale."[46] She again reprised her role in the film's tie-in video game.[47] In August 2012 at Leakycon in Chicago she joined the cast of StarKid to play Luna Lovegood in a script reading of the third Harry Potter parody musical, A Very Potter Senior Year (the other two being A Very Potter Musical and A Very Potter Sequel).
Harry Potter author J. K. Rowling gave a speech during the premiere of Deathly Hallows – Part 2 in London, where she stated that there were seven major cast members in the series, whom she referred to as "The Big Seven", and she named Lynch as one of the seven members, along with Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, Emma Watson, Tom Felton, Matthew Lewis and Bonnie Wright.[48] Rowling has maintained that, of all the actors in the film series, Lynch had the most influence on how the respective character was subsequently written; in 2012, she told Charlie Rose that when writing the final books, "I saw her. [She] got in my head. I even heard her voice when I was writing Luna."[49]
2012–2021: Further films and stage performances
editLynch went on to guest star as Princess Alehna in the first season finale of the Sky1 television series Sinbad.[50][51] She was cast in the 2013 indie crime drama film Monster Butler, based on the life of British serial killer and thief Archibald Hall.[50][52] The film was cancelled due to funding issues. Lynch starred in indie teen comedy G.B.F., which screened at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York City in April 2013 and at the Frameline Film Festival in San Francisco on 30 June 2013. It received positive reviews.[53]
In May 2013, it was announced that Lynch was to star in the British stage production of Houdini, which toured the U.K from September to October 2013; Lynch portrayed Bess Houdini, the wife and assistant of magician Harry Houdini.[54] Lynch appeared alongside Harry Potter co-stars James and Oliver Phelps in Danny and the Human Zoo, released on BBC One in August 2015.[55] Lynch starred as the titular character in the Irish independent drama My Name Is Emily, written and directed Simon Fitzmaurice.[56][57] The film premiered at the 2015 Galway Film Fleadh and garnered favourable reviews; the Galway Advertiser referred to Lynch's attributed her performance to "a lightness and ethereal quality" while remaining a "commanding lead, showing ... pain with a subtlety beyond her years."[58] Lynch was nominated for Best Actress at the Irish Film and Drama Awards for her performance.[59]
From July to August 2017, Lynch starred in a revival of Enda Walsh's Disco Pigs at Trafalgar Theatre.[60] It was later transferred to off-Broadway at the Irish Repertory Theatre and played from January to March 2018.[61] In November 2017, it was reported that she would star in the independent drama Indigo Valley, directed by Jaclyn Bethany,[62] but was forced to drop out of the project due to scheduling conflicts[63] and was replaced with Rosie Day.[64] Lynch appeared in a cameo role in Jason Mewes' directorial debut Madness in the Method (2019).[65] On 12 September 2018, Lynch was announced as one of the celebrities to compete on season 27 of ABC's Dancing with the Stars. Her professional partner was Keo Motsepe.[66] Motsepe and Lynch made it to the show's finale, finishing in third place.[67]
In March 2019, it was announced she would appear in the British premiere of the Argentinian play The Omission of the Family Coleman, written by Claudio Tolcachir. It premiered at the Theatre Royal, Bath and ran from March to April 2019.[68] In July 2019, Lynch stated that she will star in the vegan-themed short film entitled You Eat Other Animals? late that year.[69] Lynch lent her voice to Nickelodeon productions Middle School Moguls in 2019 and Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles in 2020.[70][71] Lynch narrated the story The Fountain of Fair Fortune from the audiobook adaptation of The Tales of Beedle the Bard, an in-universe book of Wizarding World children's stories written by Rowling. The audiobook released in March 2020, in aid of her charity, Lumos.[72] Along with her Harry Potter costars Bonnie Wright, Devon Murray, and Mark Williams, Lynch attended the 2021 Comic Con Stuttgart, where the four of them did met-and-greets with fans.[73][74] Lynch was also present at the 2021 Comic Con Brussels.[75][76]
After co-hosting the BBC Sounds official companion podcast for Normal People in 2020, she went on to work with two of its stars, India Mullen (Peggy) and Éanna Hardwicke (Rob), on Personal Space, a radio play for RTÉ Radio 1 in 2021.[77]
While guesting on the Talking Tastebuds podcast in 2020, Lynch reflected on her career, and handling her "overblown" expectations on it. She thought she would be "set for life" after her role as Luna Lovegood but found getting work as an actor was difficult.[78][79][80]
2022-present: Current and forthcoming projects
editLynch currently co-hosts a podcast called Just Beings with psychologist Dr. Melanie Joy.[81][82]
Lynch voiced the lead character in the 2024 animated film My Freaky Family (working title Being Betty Flood).[83] Her next lead role will be in the satirical film Influenced!, a modern take on Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray.[84]
Lynch has been cast to play Lucia Joyce in the film James and Lucia, a project that was originally planned to film in 2018 with Aidan Gillen as Joyce.[85] After Rupert Friend replaced Gillen, Lynch was cast as Joyce,[86] reprising a role she previously performed in a short film and a rehearsed stage reading.
Other ventures
editCharity work
editHer charity work includes participation with the Multiple Sclerosis Society of Ireland, in which she launched their MS Readathon fundraiser in 2010.[87] Lynch is also a member of the Board of Advisors for the non-profit organisation, the Harry Potter Alliance (HPA). With the HPA, she has supported same-sex marriage in Maine,[88] taken part in a webcast fundraiser,[89] written an article about body image and contributed to a fundraising book.[90]
Lynch is an ambassador for J. K. Rowling's charity Lumos. In 2016, Lynch and her Harry Potter co-star and fellow Lumos ambassador, Bonnie Wright, travelled to Haiti to learn about why there are 30,000 children living in orphanages, and met children who had been rescued from terrible conditions and reunited with their families. Lynch stated about charity work for children and families, "Without families and without love, children can't be children. The most important thing as a child is to be with your family. And you have to do everything you can to keep that family unit in place".[91]
Lynch contributed an essay to the 2018 book Feminists Don't Wear Pink and Other Lies, curated by Scarlett Curtis, whose royalties went to the United Nations charity Girl Up.[92]
Activism and veganism
editIn a 2019 interview, Lynch said she "hated the blood [from raw meat]" as a child and, at age 11, she became a vegetarian. In 2015, she turned to veganism for ethical reasons.[93][94] Lynch said that her activism is mostly done "in my free time as a way to give back and a way to right the world".[95]
In 2015, Lynch was the first person to sign the petition against live export in the On Cow tour, an event organised by Compassion in World Farming which visited eight cities in the European Union.[96] Since then, she has joined many animal rights demonstrations and campaigns.[97][98][99][100][101][102] In May 2018, Evanna Lynch and a journalist travelled to Kerala, India to observe the treatment of the endangered Asian elephant. In August, she and actor Peter Egan joined the organisation Save the Asian Elephants to hand in a 200,000-name petition to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, demanding to ban the advertisement in the United Kingdom of "unethical Asian elephant related holidays abroad", among other requests.[103][104]
In 2017, Lynch narrated the short documentary iAnimal by Animal Equality, dealing with the dairy industry.[105] The film received a nomination at the 2018 Raindance Film Festival.[106] In June 2018, she narrated a short film by the Humane Society International against the dog and cat meat trade in Asia.[107] In October 2019, Lynch was announced as a Lovie Award winner for her activism. The committee stated that she "raises the bar for others in a position of fame to use the Internet in the most creative and accessible ways possible, to introduce new ideas to people that can truly change our world for the better".[108]
The ChickPeeps podcast
editIn November 2017, Lynch founded the podcast The ChickPeeps, co-hosted by Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix actor Robbie Jarvis, Surfers Against Sewage representative Momoko Hill, and Protego Foundation founder Tylor Starr. Its content is based on veganism and features discussions on diverse topics, often joined by prominent activists such as Ingrid Newkirk, Earthling Ed, and Victoria Moran, among many others.[95] Evanna Lynch started The ChickPeeps with the intention of running "a bit more vulnerable and human [vegan podcast] that feels like you're hanging out with friends... where we have a laugh, maybe we learn some things, maybe we ask some questions".[93]
Kinder Beauty Box
editIn November 2018, Lynch co-founded, along with American actress Daniella Monet, the vegan and cruelty-free make-up and beauty care box Kinder Beauty Box.[109] The subscription box, which started its monthly delivery in January 2019, was intended to "put ethical brands in the spotlight" and "overcome confusing jargon" used by big brands that test on animals. Kinder Beauty Box was conceived after Lynch and Monet discussed the difficulty they had looking for vegan beauty products.[95] The products are curated by them, shipped in sustainable packaging and a portion of the sales goes to animal rights and environmental causes and benefits for vegan rights.[109]
Just Beings podcast
editIn August 2022, Lynch teamed up with award-winning psychologist and bestselling author, Dr. Melanie Joy, to launch a brand-new podcast called Just Beings. On the show, Lynch and Joy examine the common psychology that drives all harmful and unjust behaviours. Through conversations with changemakers, they explore how we can shift our thinking to create a more compassionate and just world for people, animals, and the planet — and improve our personal lives and relationships in the process.[81][82][110]
J.K. Rowling's comments about trans people
editWhen J.K. Rowling posted a series of tweets on X about the transgender community starting in 2020, she received a lot of criticism, including from most Harry Potter cast members.[111] While a supporter of the transgender community herself, Lynch defended Rowling's beliefs, tweeting "it's irresponsible to discuss such a delicate topic" though she added "I wish [Rowling] wouldn't." However, after posting these tweets and receiving blowback for supporting Rowling, Lynch deleted her X account in 2020. In an interview with The Telegraph in 2023, Lynch stated compassion for both sides of the argument on Rowling's anti-trans controversy, but also believed the backlash against Rowling has surprised her, "especially when she wrote her essay [revealing experiences in her unhappy first marriage]. I just felt that her character has always been to advocate for the most vulnerable members of society. The problem is that there's a disagreement over who's the most vulnerable. I do wish people would just give her more grace and listen to her."[16]
Personal life
editLynch lives in London, England. She lived in Los Angeles for five years.[112] In 2007, Lynch began a relationship with her Harry Potter cast member and ChickPeeps co-host Robbie Jarvis.[113] Lynch did not make the relationship public until 2015, when she posted photos of herself and Jarvis to Instagram.[114][115] She and Jarvis split the following year, though they remain on good terms.[116][117][118] She then dated singer-songwriter AnDel in 2017. They have since broken up, but the date they did this is unspecified.[119] As of 2021, Lynch is reportedly dating an unidentified French man she met in London.[120][121]
In a 2014 interview, she mentioned her devout Catholic upbringing. "I stopped going to Mass a few years ago, mainly because I disagree with the rules," she said. "I don't like anything that's about punishing yourself and making you feel bad about yourself, and growing up I felt bad about indulging myself or doing anything for fun".[5]
Lynch has worked to promote healthy self-esteem and body image in young girls because of her previous experiences with the eating disorder anorexia nervosa.[122] She wrote an essay, "Why the Body Bind is My Nightmare", where she described her emotional struggle with her appearance and how she managed to overcome it through allusions pertaining to the Harry Potter series.[123]
In October 2021, Headline in the UK and Ballantine Books in the USA published Lynch's book The Opposite of Butterfly Hunting: The Tragedy and Glory of Growing Up – A Memoir. It details "her recovery from anorexia and how the conflict between the comfort of self-destruction and the liberation of creativity still rages inside of her".[124]
Lynch has said that her favorite book is Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix "no matter what pretentious answer I give you".[125] She loves knitting and reading and "[dangling] off any circus apparatus within reach", as well as dancing and circus arts.[126] As a vegan, Lynch loves banana smoothies[127] and has also shared vegan recipes for several Harry Potter delicacies like butterbeer.[128]
Filmography
editFilm
editYear | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2007 | Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix | Luna Lovegood | |
2009 | Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince | ||
2010 | Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1 | ||
2011 | Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 | ||
2013 | G.B.F. | McKenzie Pryce | |
2015 | Addiction: A 60's Love Story | Theresa Bornstein | |
My Name Is Emily | Emily Egan | ||
2019 | Madness in the Method | Abbie Fox | |
2024 | My Freaky Family | Betty Flood | Voice |
Television
editYear | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2012 | Sinbad | Alehna | Episode: "Land of the Dead" |
2013 | Apex | Regan | Episode: "Pilot" |
2015 | Danny and the Human Zoo | Bridget Riordan | Television film |
2018 | Dancing with the Stars | Herself (contestant) | Third place |
2019 | Middle School Moguls | Academy Voice / Tablet / Lunchbox (voice) | Episode: "The Making of a Mogul" |
2020 | Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles | Gentry (voice) | Episode: "Donnie vs. Witch Town" |
2021 | Silent Witness | Paisley Robertson | Episode: "Redemption" (2 parts) |
2022 | Harry Potter 20th Anniversary: Return to Hogwarts | Herself | Television special |
Shorts
editYear | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2013 | It Don't Come Easy | Ella | |
2019 | Lucia Joyce: Full Capacity | Lucia Joyce | |
2020 | Europeans: Donnú Bréige (Fake Tan) | Róisín | |
2021 | Other Half | Icarus | animated short |
You Eat Other Animals? | Alien Queen | Released for World Vegan Day 2021[129] | |
2022 | Bus Girl | Beth | Jessica Henwick's Phone Trilogy |
TBA | Sandwich Man | ||
Gardening | Leonora | animated short | |
2024 | Sanctuary | Narrator | animated short |
Music video
editYear | Title | Role | Performer(s) |
---|---|---|---|
2017 | DISARM | Daisy Decibel | Bry |
Video games
editYear | Game | Role |
---|---|---|
2007 | Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix | Luna Lovegood (voice) |
2009 | Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince | |
2010 | Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1 | |
2011 | Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 | |
2016 | Lego Dimensions |
Stage
editYear | Title | Role | Production(s) |
---|---|---|---|
2012 | A Very Potter Senior Year | Luna Lovegood | LeakyCon 2012 at Hilton Chicago and Chicago, Illinois |
2013 | Houdini | Bess Houdini | Grand Theatre, Blackpool, Theatre Royal, Windsor, Stoke Repertory Theatre, Gaiety Theatre, Dublin and Swansea Grand Theatre |
2017/18 | Disco Pigs | Sinéad/"Runt" | Trafalgar Studios, Whitehall, Trafalgar Square, City of Westminster, London (West End); Irish Repertory Theatre, Manhattan, New York City (Off-Broadway) |
2019 | The Omission of the Family Coleman | Gaby | Theatre Royal, Bath, England (Off West End) |
Games for Lovers | Martha | The Vaults Theatre, London | |
2021 | Calico | Lucia Joyce | Rehearsed reading produced via Zoom for Bloomsday 2021[130] |
2023 | Under the Black Rock | Niamh Ryan | Arcola Theatre, London |
Other roles
editYear | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2010 | Foster | Narrator | novella by Claire Keegan, broadcast in 3 parts on BBC Radio 4[131][132] |
2017–2021 | The ChickPeeps | Co-Host | Podcast with Tylor Starr, Robbie Jarvis, and Momoko Hill |
2019 | Dancing with Lucia | Lucia Joyce | Radio Documentary for RTÉ Lyric FM, directed by Deirdre Mulrooney[133] |
2020 | Keep Your Eyes on Me | Narrator | Audiobook of the novel by Sam Blake[134] |
The Fountain of Fair Fortune | Narrator | Audiobook of The Tales of Beedle the Bard. Based on the story by J. K. Rowling[72] | |
Obsessed with... Normal People | Co-Host | Official BBC Sounds companion podcast for the TV series Normal People[135] | |
2021 | We'd Need to Manage It | Narrator | Short story by Naoise Dolan, broadcast on BBC Radio 4[136] |
The Opposite of Butterfly Hunting | Narrator | Audiobook of Lynch's own memoir | |
Personal Space | Helen | Lead role; Radio play by Máiread Kiernan, broadcast on RTÉ Radio 1[77] | |
A Little Kinder | Co-Host | Podcast with Daniella Monet | |
Life Sentence | Eve | Podcast; 1 Episode[137] | |
2022 | The No-Show | Siobhan | Audiobook of the novel by Beth O'Leary[138] |
Obsessed with... Conversations with Friends | Co-Host | Official BBC Sounds companion podcast for the TV series Conversations with Friends;[139] also broadcast on BBC Three | |
2022–present | Just Beings | Co-Host | Podcast with Melanie Joy[140] |
Awards and nominations
editYear | Work | Award | Category | Result | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2009 | Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince | Young Artist Awards | Best Supporting Actress | Nominated | |
Scream Awards | Best Supporting Actress | Nominated | [35] | ||
2016 | My Name Is Emily | Irish Film and Drama Awards | Actress in a Lead Role Film | Nominated | [59] |
See also
editReferences
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- ^ a b "Potter girl Evanna speaks only to the Drogheda Independent". Drogheda Independent. Independent News & Media. 8 February 2006. Archived from the original on 26 February 2012. Retrieved 16 July 2010. Retrieved from Internet Archive 15 February 2014.
- ^ Hogan, Louise (9 July 2007). "Evanna goes Potty as big screen wins over her dad". Irish Independent. Independent News & Media. Retrieved 23 July 2010.
- ^ Shortall, Eithne (14 January 2018). "Great minds think aloud". The Sunday Times. News UK. Retrieved 19 August 2021.
- ^ a b "Life after Luna: Evanna Lynch has peace and prosperity". Irish Independent. 13 July 2014. Retrieved 13 March 2024.
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- ^ "Luna Lovegood actress talks Potter". BBC News. 16 July 2007. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
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- ^ "News – headlines". Dcu.ie. 22 March 2011. Archived from the original on 2 April 2012. Retrieved 4 April 2011.
- ^ a b Presenter: Ryan Tubridy (23 April 2009). "Evanna Lynch" (MP3). The Tubridy Show. RTÉ Radio 1.
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- ^ "Evanna Lynch says 'Harry Potter' author JK Rowling helped her through an eating disorder at 11 — before the actress was cast as Luna Lovegood". Insider. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
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- ^ Clarke, Donald; Dwyer, Michael (11 December 2009). "A year in film". The Irish Times. Archived from the original on 3 September 2010. Retrieved 13 July 2010.
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External links
edit- Official Website
- Evanna Lynch at IMDb
- Evanna Lynch at AllMovie
- The ChickPeeps
- Just Beings podcast
- Sanctuary