It was argued Chap. 1 that the constrained agency of elite migrant-artists has been an under-researched area. This means that there are, in fact, many unanswered provocative questions about the life and work of global elite migrants. While they belong to the category of informants whom scholars view as ‘challenging’. They are highly visible, dependent on their networks and, therefore extremely vulnerable because of their potential exposure to the public and also because of severe network sanctions. They are both privileged and vulnerable. And as noted by the famous French novelist of the nineteenth century Honoré de Balzac, it is not easy to describe in one word ‘the splendor and miseries’ of someone so controversial. Therefore, the question that I would like to ask in this chapter is what would be the best way to study the lives of global elite migrants and the ontogenesis of their migrant agency with the purpose to make their voices heard and their ‘splendors and miseries’ visible. What would be the best way to think about them as professionals, migrants and real people, with all their social skills, ambitions, moments of success but also fears and insecurity? The answer is interpretive biography. Here in this chapter, I, therefore, introduce the method of interpretive biography, explain its nuances and analytical procedures, and justify its application to my case.