I hope that the kind reader recognises this as a despairing attempt at humour.
I tend to play characters that I can infuse with certain kinds of humour. Even the baddest guy can be funny in his own particular way. I want the audience to engage with the character on some deeper level so that they leave the cinema still thinking about him.
Tod laughed. He was always able to find the humour in even the creepiest situations. I'd thought that it was an undead thing, until I became a member of the undead. Then I realized it was a Tod-thing.
The qualities I am looking for in Miss Right are intelligence and humour.
Mixing humour and harsh reality is a very human behaviour, it's the way people stay sane in their daily lives.
It had to be hammered home quite a bit because I didn't see any humour in my life at all.
No humorist is under any obligation to provide answers and probably if you were to delve into the literary history of humour it's probably all about not providing answers because the humorist essentially says: this is the way things are.
I've always had a sense of humour, and I still do, so I just want to go on performing as long as I can. It's as simple as that.
I love Andre 3000 from OutKast. I think we'd complement each other, but I'm hoping he's got a good sense of humour.
From the stage I've seen people of all ages absolutely roaring at really good toilet humour.
My favourite writer is Beckett and I keep going back to wallow in his work like a deep pool of dark humour or like an oxygen tank when you can't breath in a world consumed by piety, hypocrisy and self-satisfaction.
What's happened to humour? We're becoming American. Everyone gets so angry over everything.
It's the teenage and university crowd, so we give them lots of sex jokes and gross humour.
People don't get my sense of humour.
What is really important to me is a sense of humour and a mischief about life. Life is just too boring otherwise.
I don't think comedy is necessarily an attack. It's finding humour in life. I don't think if you're making a joke about something you're automatically demeaning it.
It's all rot that they put in the war-news about the good humour of the troops, how they are arranging dances almost before they are out of the front-line. We don't act like that because we are in a good humour: we are in a good humour because otherwise we should go to pieces.
There just isn't enough televised Chess
HOMŒOPATHIST, n. The humorist of the medical profession.
I definitely try to mix humour into anything I do, even if it is into a drama.