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Nina Dobrev Admits Leaving ‘The Vampire Diaries’ Was ‘Terrifying’ But Necessary

Nina Dobrev’s takeoff from ‘The Vampire Diaries’ may have amazed you — however it was forever her arrangement. Furthermore, now she has another one.

Following her six-year contract with The CW, Nina Dobrev left The Vampire Diaries toward the finish of season six – something fans couldn’t accept. At 26, she was prepared to advance from playing youngster, Elena Gilbert, and in another meeting with Harper’s Bazaar, she concedes “that was the arrangement from the get-go.” She gave fans the farewell we as a whole needed, and even returned for an appearance in the finale. Be that as it may, leaving wasn’t a simple undertaking, she concedes.

“On the off chance that anything, the way that [leaving] alarmed me drove me considerably more. I expected to feel that dread of ‘Goodness, my God, imagine a scenario where I never land a position again?'” she conceded in the magazine. “That simply influenced me to need to work five times as difficult to ensure that didn’t occur.”

Notwithstanding, she has her eyes set on various things now — an alternate way of life and distinctive sorts of parts, particularly ones individuals wouldn’t anticipate. “I would prefer not to play a young person any longer. I need to assume grown-up parts and be tested and work with extraordinary producers and recount mind blowing stories, and that has implied being extremely critical,” she said. Since TVD, she’s landed parts in xXx: Return of Xander Cage, Workaholics, and has three all the more coming up — Crash Pad, Flatliners and Departures.

In the event that you take after her on Instagram, you likewise know she’s a daring individual and is dependably up for another enterprise. “My dependable guideline is, I’ll have a go at anything once. I have a sound—or perhaps undesirable—fixation on attempting things out of the blue,” she stated, including nobody perceives her when she’s out in nature. “No one envisions me to be without anyone else’s input hiking, so they simply figure, ‘It can’t be her.'”