A time will come when people will think I am a myth, or rather something the newspapers have made up.
In the summer of 2009, I was at the Shakespeare lab at the public theater in New York.
It's because you have no power. You give them all the material and the cinematographer, the director, the editor, boy what they can choose. . . You better hope they like you because they can slice and dice and make you look like a damn fool when your face and body are up there on a 30-foot screen.
I do like taking on responsibility, sometimes too much. But I was aware of that early on and it's something that came up in the previous set of interviews, and that is the actor‛s contribution.
One of the great things about film is that, typically anything that's introduced in the first five minutes, the audiences will by into.
I feel honored to be a part of something that provided people with entertainment and that inspired conversations. I feel very, very fortunate.
One of the advantages of shooting digitally was that we had a lot of time. When you shoot, even if you do a good performance, it may get lost in the editing room. It's just one more way that a potentially good film might go astray.
We come from a long line of people who live to read boring texts – I think it may be why we all die young. Complete boredom. (Geary)
Donald Trump's talking down our democracy. And I, for one, am appalled that somebody who is the nominee of one of our two major parties would take that kind of position.
That seems to be a woman who is genuinely depressed that this is the political dialogue she [Hillary Clinton] is been thrown into in the 21st century in running for president of the United States.
Good decisions can have bad short-term outcomes but be great for the business long-term.