A woman has shocked even the most die-hard Twilight fans after revealing she played a major role in the iconic series.
Taylor Dianne Robinson played Bella Swan and Edward Cullen’s daughter Renesmee when she was seven years old in Breaking Dawn – Part 2, and took to social media to share her experiences.
She brought up her IMBD credits, which revealed that the 2012 film – the fourth in the Twilight Saga starring Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson – was the role she is “best known for.”
The actress and content creator also showed off a photo of her with the cast, noting that she is holding hands with Stewart.
“Yes, I may have had to narrate Rami Malek’s face for seven hours during filming because that’s one of Renesmee’s powers,” she added.
Taylor Dianne Robinson played Renesmee when she was seven years old in Breaking Dawn – Part 2 and took to social media to share her experiences
“And yes, I may have seen Robert Pattinson sleeping,” she added.
“What are you going to do about it,” she joked.
Taylor appears to have taken a step back from acting and is now a Dungeon and Dragons content creator who posts under the name ‘Taylor’s Tavern’.
Her YouTube bio describes herself as a singer, actor and ‘dungeon master’.
Taylor wasn’t the only actress to play Renesmee; actress Mackenzie Foy also played the half-vampire child.
Followers couldn’t believe the epic reveal and took to the comments section to share their thoughts.
“I was very confused when I was Googling – you’re not Mackensie Foy. I had to dig deeper to realize that there were four different Renesmees of different ages. I assume this is a young character who grows older during the film?’ one user asked.
“Okay, so she wasn’t the horrible CGI baby. Awesome,” another joked.
Taylor assured viewers that she has IMBD credits and that the 2012 film – the fourth in the Twilight Saga – was the role for which she is “best known”
She played Bella and Edward’s vampire child in the hit film franchise
The Twilight saga was split into four films, with Taylor starring in the fourth
Taylor wasn’t the only actress to play Renesmee; actress Mackenzie Foy also played the half-vampire child
“Yes, I may have had to narrate Remi Malek’s face for seven hours during filming because that’s one of Renesmee’s powers,” Taylor explained.
Followers couldn’t believe the epic reveal and took to the comments section to share their thoughts
‘So cool! I would brag that I was a random extra in that movie and you were quite the character! Very wonderful!’ bellowed another.
The 2008 film went viral last week after a ‘cringey’ deleted clip from the vampire film made the rounds on social media.
The clip from the film, which stars Kristen Stewart as Bella Swan and Robert Pattinson as Edward Cullen, shows Bella at his home for the first time and given a tour of where he lives.
The bedroom scene does appear in the final cut of the film, which grossed $393.6 million worldwide, but there’s one part of the conversation between vampire Edward and schoolgirl Bella that was left out, and it’s clear why.
In a video shared to Instagram by user @corinnieeeee, who regularly dissects the Twilight franchise, she can be heard telling viewers, “I guess we need to rewatch what I consider to be the second most cringe-worthy by Twilight deleted scene, the infamous chinchilla dropping scene. Again, be warned: this is cringe in the extreme.”
The extended version of the scene shows Bella inspecting Edward’s “cool” bedroom and mentioning random items, including diaries and his music collection, when she picks up a rain wand.
‘I used to make this. “I had a chinchilla and my mom and I used to make these out of chinchilla feces and paper towel rolls,” Bella says awkwardly to Edward, before adding, “Maybe that’s weird.”
Corinne then reenters the picture and tells her followers, “My biggest takeaway from that scene has always been: who ever said or did that and thought it would be good to include it in this movie?
‘Because again, that particular detail about the chinchilla feces, that’s not something we can blame Stephanie Meyer for, that’s a Catherine Hardwicke original, that wasn’t even in the book!’ she adds, referring to the book’s author and then the film’s director.
“So I just need to know why. Yeah, I think this one is a little easier to watch than the finger biting scene. This one is pretty funny, but what’s the face he makes next? Like, why did you do that?!”