It’s been over two decades since Emma Watson first stepped onto Platform ¾, but the world’s obsession with the woman behind Hermione Granger is only growing. While we all watched her grow up on screen, Watson has spent her post-Hogwarts years becoming a powerhouse advocate, a scholar, and a literal trailblazer.
Following the emotional Return to Hogwarts reunion special, fans have been scouring the internet for every bit of trivia they can find. While she’s a household name, there are still a few “hidden gems” about her life that have the internet doing a double-take.
For starters, did you know the quintessential English rose was actually born in Paris? Emma arrived on April , , to British lawyer parents and lived in France until she was five. It wasn’t until her parents split that she moved to Oxfordshire—and the rest is Wizarding World history.
But despite her global fame, Watson craved a “normal” life. While studying at Brown University, she managed to pull off the ultimate invisibility cloak. She once hosted a party for of her closest college friends, and in a move that feels almost impossible today, not a single person posted a photo to social media. “Nobody ever asked me for an autograph,” she recalled of her time on campus, where she spent her finals-week breaks watching The Carrie Diaries and baking banana bread.
Watson has also used her voice to champion others, founded the feminist book club “Our Shared Shelf,” and served as a UN Women Goodwill Ambassador. She’s famously unapologetic about her beliefs, telling Vanity Fair she doesn’t care if people call her “difficult” or a “diva.”
“It’s not going to stop me from trying to do the right thing,” she stated.
Perhaps most shocking to fans is that we almost lost our Hermione mid-franchise. After the fifth film, the weight of fame became so intense that Watson considered quitting. Ultimately, she stayed, admitting that leaving would have made her “public enemy No. .”
Once the cameras finally stopped rolling, she celebrated her freedom by debuting that iconic pixie cut—a move she described as symbolic. “I had to have my hair long for a decade,” she explained, waiting until she felt “very confident” to make the dramatic chop.
Between maintaining nearly different personal journals—including a “yoga diary” and a “dream diary”—and single-handedly pitching The Perks of Being a Wallflower to studio heads in L.A., Watson has proven she’s just as much of a go-getter as her fictional counterpart.
She might have started as the girl under the stairs’ best friend, but today, Emma Watson is a legend all her own.
Would you like me to find some of the most inspiring quotes from Emma Watson’s UN speeches to share with you?
