Top 8 really interesting Harry Potter facts : you should know

Here are 8 fascinating Harry Potter facts that you should know if you love to harry potter:

 

 1. THE ACTRESS WHO PLAYED MOANING MYRTLE WAS MUCH OLDER THAN A STUDENT

Shirley Henderson was 36 when she played the washroom frequenting apparition of a 14-year-old understudy who was murdered by a basilisk's gaze in Chamber of Secrets. Playing a phantom was harder than playing a genuine individual, she told the BBC, "as a result of all the specialized stuff it included. I must be lashed up to this bridle, so it looked as though I was flying; thus, I could be pushed through the air and wondered again and again. It's truly exceptionally tiring on your body. It likewise requires a ton of fixation because there's a wide range of individuals yelling stuff like 'Turn, do this, take a gander at this' so they can do all their stuff with the PC impacts while I'm attempting to act it out. However, when you shut all that out, it's incredible fun. Great fun." 

 

2 .  AZKABAN DIRECTOR ALFONSO Cuarón ASKED THE TRIO TO WRITE ESSAYS ABOUT THEIR CHARACTERS. 

Alfonso Cuarón needed Watson, Radcliffe, and Grint to compose papers about their characters from a first individual perspective. As per Heyman, "they all reacted particularly in character … Dan composed a page, Emma composed 10, and Rupert didn't convey anything." Grint revealed to Entertainment Weekly, "I didn't do mine, since I didn't figure Ron would. Or on the other hand, that was my reason. At that point, I was quite occupied with the genuine homework associated with my tests, and I didn't do it. Yet, at long last, it felt right since that is the thing that Ron would have done." 

 

3. ROWLING AND HARRY SHARE A BIRTHDAY. 

The two of them victory candles on July 31 (glad birthday, JKR!). What's more, that is by all account not the only impact Rowling had on her characters: She's said that Hermione is somewhat similar to her when she was more youthful, and her #1 creature is an otter—which is, obviously, Hermione's Patronus. Additionally, both Dumbledore and Rowling like sherbet lemons (Rowling said that the wizard "has a great taste"). 

 

4. SHE INVENTED THE NAMES OF THE HOGWARTS HOUSES ON THE BACK OF A BARF BAG. 

In 2000, Scholastic gave schoolchildren over the U.S. the occasion to pose Rowling inquiries about Harry Potter. At the point when one understudy solicited her, "What made you think about individuals' names and quarters at Hogwarts?" Rowling reacted, "I designed the names of the Houses on the rear of a plane debilitated sack! This is valid. I love designing games. However, I additionally gather abnormal names, so I can glance through my scratchpad and pick one that suits another character." 

 

5. THE DEMENTORS ARE BASED ON ROWLING'S STRUGGLE WITH DEPRESSION AFTER HER MOTHER'S DEATH. 

Rowling's mom, who had numerous sclerosis, kicked the bucket in 1990, after which Rowling endured a time of misery. She would utilize the experience to portray Harry Potter's dementors, unpleasant animals that feed on human feelings. "It's so hard to portray [depression] to somebody who's never been there because it's not bitterness," Rowling disclosed to Oprah Winfrey. "I know bitterness. Pity is to cry and to feel. In any case, it's that chilly nonattendance of feeling—that truly burrowed out inclination. That is the thing that Dementors are." 

 

6. SHE CREATED QUIDDITCH AFTER A FIGHT WITH HER BOYFRIEND. 

"If you need to make a game like Quidditch, what you need to do is have a huge contention with your then-beau," Rowling said in 2003. "You leave the house, you plunk down in a bar, and you concoct Quidditch. What's more, I don't generally have the foggiest idea of the association between the column and Quidditch; aside from that, Quidditch is a significant brutal game. Possibly in my most profound, haziest soul, I might very want to see him hit by a bludger." 

 

7. ARTHUR WEASLEY WAS SUPPOSED TO DIE. 

In a fight among great and insidious this epic, not every person would endure alive—that would have prompted "exceptionally soft, comfortable books," she disclosed to Meredith Vieira. "You know, unexpectedly, I [would be] part of the way through Goblet of Fire, and abruptly everybody would simply have a truly incredible life, and … the plot would go AWOL." 

Which isn't to state that Rowling knew precisely who was in peril. She contemplated murdering Arthur Weasley after Nagini arranged by the Phoenix assaults him, yet rather selected to spare him, mostly because "there were not many acceptable dads in the book. Actually, you could make an awesome case for Arthur Weasley being the main acceptable dad in the entire arrangement." (She additionally "truly viewed as" executing Ron, at that point reconsidered it.) 

Rather, Lupin—a character she had no goal of slaughtering when she started the books—and Tonks kicked the bucket during the last Battle of Hogwarts. "I needed there to be a reverberation of what ended up harrying just to show irrefutably the evil of what Voldemort's doing," she said. "I think one of the most crushing things about war is the kids abandoned. As occurred in the main war when Harry's deserted, I needed us to see another kid abandoned. Also, it made it powerful that it was [Lupin and Tonks's] infant child." 

 

8. DUMBLEDORE WAS GAY. 

In 2007, when asked by a fan whether Hogwarts' number one dean had ever been infatuated, Rowling reacted, "I generally thought of Dumbledore as gay." She uncovered that he had gone gaga for Grindelwald, "and that adds to his shock when Grindelwald demonstrated himself to be what he was." 

Rowling said she found the response to the news fascinating. "To me, it was anything but a serious deal," she told Radcliffe. "This is an elderly person who has an entirely horrible task to take care of. What's more, his gayness isn't generally pertinent. Relevant to him as a character, but I generally considered him to be a forlorn character. What's more, I feel that there is, in certainty, a trace of it in [Deathly Hallows] due to the relationship he has with Grindelwald. He fell hard for this kid ... Also, wouldn't you say it was wonderful that Dumbledore, who is consistently the extraordinary hero of adoration,… his one incredible experience of affection, was absolutely terrible."

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