I think I feel more like you're an actor for hire and you take the jobs you want to take, obviously, and some pay well and some don't pay well at all but you go on a gut feeling and it's all a big adventure.
The sets were fantastic. The Harry Potter sets are brilliant. You do get transported for a second.
Awards are like applause, and every actor likes to hear applause.
You feel yourself working to show something. I've learned to distrust that feeling.
Gardeners are good at nurturing, and they have a great quality of patience, they're tender. They have to be persistent.
The tensions between authority and the people need to be heard, especially when they are suffering and they can't eat.
I have grown up loving Shakespeare.
Education, awareness and prevention are the key, but stigmatisation and exclusion from family is what makes people suffer most
I veer away from trying to understand why I act. I just know I need to do it.
I guess I'd love to be surprised by something I had never thought of.
If I had a gun to my head and I had to choose between theater and film I'd choose theater.
I'm sure acting is a deeply neurotic thing to do.
I don't feel particularly comfortable about actors using whatever power they may have to push their beliefs, unless they're extremely well informed.
We'd all like to believe that perhaps people could stop killing each other.
People fear they won’t get what they want.
Ridicule is also a weapon against forces of evil. Really clever, intelligent ridicule.
What moves me in art is how we question who we are as people.
God is not anything human. God is a force, God is chaos, God is unknown. God is terror and enlightenment at the same time.