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Emma Watson is best known for playing Hermione Granger in the Harry Potter franchise. Photo / Getty Images
It appears that Harry Potter actress Emma Watson is giving up her Hollywood lifestyle to settle down with her fiancé.
According to her agent, the 30-year-old Watson has gone completely “inactive,” which is just a fancy way of saying she has “stopped acting.”
Her agent went on to say that she “is not making any new commitments.”
The Daily Mail Australia reports that the child star has taken a big step back from the limelight to spend more time with her fiancé, businessman Leo Robinton, with whom she has been dating for 18 months.
Her source revealed: “Emma has gone into hiding, she’s settling down with Leo. They’re in hiding. Maybe she wants a family.”
The couple reportedly lived secretly in Ibiza for several weeks prior to January, spending their mornings reading newspapers about “smoothies at a vegan cafe.”
Now, he’s back in Los Angeles with Robinton, who reportedly makes a lot of money selling legal cannabis in Los Angeles.
Watson was thrown into the spotlight when she was 10 years old, playing Hermione Granger in the first Harry Potter movie, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone.
He acted alongside Daniel Radcliffe (Harry Potter) and Rupert Grint (Ron Weasley), and the three young stars will appear in all subsequent Harry Potter films.
After her stint as a genius witch ended, Watson starred in movies such as The Bling Ring, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, Disney’s live-action remake of Beauty and the Beast, and most recently Little Women in 2019, which was his latest film project.
According to her IMDb page, she is not blocked for any future roles.
Watson missed a big moment when she and actor Miles Teller were the original cast of La La Land, but were replaced by Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling.
“There was a time when Emma Watson and Miles Teller were doing it,” Oscar-nominated director Damien Chazelle recently revealed.
“None of that casting stuff ended up lasting or working.”
Watson explained the situation in March 2019.
“It’s one of these frustrating things where names are attached to projects early on as a way to build anticipation for something to come before a deal is reached,” he said.