Rachel Hannah Weisz (/vaɪs/ "vice"; born 7 March 1970) is an Academy Award winning British actress.
Bad things happen when people work together. Everything goes out of control.
I'm thinking of doing more theatre. It makes me very happy.
People still kill in the name of religion. We haven't evolved to the point where we're one tribe called humans.
I like acting too much and it's too, I'm just too busy doing that and I'm too hungry for it, to get behind the camera. I mean, unless I could act in it, too. I don't think I've got the right brain. I'm too disorganized.
My real fantasy if I was to drop out would be to live in a mobile home and be a hippie and drive around festivals and have millions of children - children with dreadlocks and nose rings - and play the flute.
I want to play interesting women.
I think that in big-budget movies there's a lot of other stuff going on besides acting, like special effects.
I'm a storyteller, I'm an actor, an entertainer.
The happiest days of my youth were when my brother and I would run through the woods and feel quite safe.
The thing about acting is even if you get technically more skilled at what you do, every time you begin a film or a play you're terrified. You don't know if you're going to pull it off. Every film and every story has its own set of challenges. I've never felt like, oh yeah, that's it, nailed it! You can never sit and rest. That's why it's such an exciting job. It's beginning again every time you begin again. New story, new character, new place, new time, new director. It's like moving to a different planet and trying to figure out how to live there.
When I play a part, I never think about likability.