Gal Gadot knows what she wants. After landing her breakout role as Wonder Woman Gadot made an important phone call to her husband Yaron [Jaron] Varsano.

“After I shoot the movie? I want us to have another baby,” she told Vogue.

Wonder Woman debuted in 2016's "Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice," and Gadot “had just landed in New York” when she got the call.

“And the first phone call I made was to Jaron,” Gadot said.

Now, as an established actress, having starred in not only “Wonder Woman,” “Justice League” and the “Fast and Furious” franchise, but also smaller roles like “Keeping Up with the Joneses,” it’s hard to imagine Gadot almost gave up acting entirely at one point. She has been open over recent years about how her life could have played out in an entirely different scenario.

“People are telling you your life will change if you get this part. And then you don’t get it,” she said. “I reached a place where I didn’t want to do that anymore.”

Although the Israeli-born actress admits she’s “pretty ambitious” she’s a bigger believer in karma. “If it’s mine it’s mine, and if it’s not it’s not,” she said.

After the phone call to her husband where she told him about being cast as “Wonder Woman,” Gadot said her husband described her in a Hebrew saying that is “hard for [her] to translate.”

“If you imagine a kite, right? If it flows really well? My instinct is to tie the string to the ground,” she said. “But it’s like the more successful I get, the more I want to plant my roots in and make sure everything is balanced and still focused on the important things in life, which, for me, is family.”

Gadot and Varsano share two daughters, Alma, 8, and Maya, 3.

“Wonder Woman 1984” has been pushed back from a June 5 release date to August 14.

Gal Gadot
Gal Gadot attends the 2018 Vanity Fair Oscar Party hosted by Radhika Jones at Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts on March 4, 2018 in Beverly Hills, California. Getty Images/Dia Dipasupil