Takeaways
- Margot Robbie says she’s setting new boundaries and keeping her son out of the public eye after past interviews were misquoted.
- For actors and creators, her approach is a useful reminder: privacy is a strategy, especially in a click-driven media cycle.
- Robbie is also addressing early conversation around Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights, encouraging audiences to wait until they see the film.
Margot Robbie’s new boundary: “Protect him”
Margot Robbie is drawing a firm line between her public career and her private life—especially now that she’s a mom.
She’s shared that she plans to keep her son out of the spotlight and avoid discussing details about him publicly. Her reason is straightforward: earlier in her career, she spoke more openly, but felt “burnt” after seeing quotes taken out of context or attributed to her inaccurately.
That experience—and the lack of control that can come with media narratives—shaped how she approaches privacy today.
Why this story hits right now
Celebrity coverage (and influencer coverage) moves fast:
- Viral clips spread faster than full context
- Headlines often simplify nuanced answers
- Social reposts can amplify the wrong version of what you said
Robbie’s approach is a modern one: share less about what you never want interpreted, remixed, or reposted—especially when it involves family.
What entertainment pros can learn (PR tips you can use)
If you’re an actor, filmmaker, content creator, or crew member building visibility, this is a practical blueprint—not just celebrity news.
1) Set your “off-limits” topics early
Choose what you won’t discuss and stick to it:
- Children/family details
- Home location or routines
- Relationship timelines
- Medical topics
- Money/contract details
The earlier your boundaries are clear, the easier it is to maintain them without drama.
2) Use a one-sentence boundary script
A boundary works best when it’s calm and repeatable. Examples:
- “I’m keeping that part private.”
- “I’d rather focus on the work.”
- “I don’t share details about my family.”
Say it the same way every time. Consistency reduces the chance of a messy headline.
3) Redirect instead of shutting down
You don’t need to “no comment” everything. Pivot to something useful:
- Your current project
- Your process (auditions, prep, rehearsal)
- A lesson you learned on set
- A cause you care about
You’re not being evasive—you’re being professional.
4) Assume anything can become the headline
If you’re doing press, podcasts, livestreams, or Q&As, assume your most casual sentence could be pulled as the quote.
Headline-safe habits:
- Avoid absolutes (“always,” “never,” “everyone”)
- Be careful with sarcasm if the context might be clipped
- Repeat key points in simpler language so your intent is clear
Robbie on Wuthering Heights: “Just wait.”
While protecting her personal life, Robbie is still stepping into big, high-visibility projects—like Emerald Fennell’s adaptation of Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights.
The film has already sparked conversation online—especially around casting choices—but Robbie’s message is basically: people should reserve judgment until they see the movie.
The Jacob Elordi discussion
Robbie has also publicly backed co-star Jacob Elordi as Heathcliff, emphasizing that audiences will understand the choice once they see the performance.
This is another lesson for working talent: narratives can form before the public sees the final work, so having a steady, consistent message matters.
A quick real-world example (for actors/creators)
Imagine you just booked a streaming role and someone asks about your dating life or family.
A simple 3-step response:
- Boundary: “I keep my family life private.”
- Redirect: “But I can tell you what surprised me most about this role…”
- Value: Share something about prep, auditions, or what you learned on set
You stay likable, professional, and protected.
Why Project Casting readers should care
Project Casting is for people doing the work—actors, creators, filmmakers, and crew. Whether you’re building your first credits or booking consistently, your public image is part of your career toolkit.
This story is a reminder that:
- You can be visible without being exposed
- You can promote a project without turning your private life into content
- Boundaries aren’t “cold”—they’re career-minded
Ready for your next role? Explore casting calls and entertainment jobs on Project Casting and keep building momentum—on your terms.


