I'm still really fascinated with characters and people and telling their stories.
The character of a man is known from his conversations.
I don't think about the characters I choose to play, analytically or consciously.
Public behavior is merely private character writ large.
I tend to play more true-to-life characters in real situations.
Novelists invent characters; poets invent themselves.
I like characters who remind me of someone I know.
You try not to become so emotionally attached to your character, but you do.
Persistence is to the character of man as carbon is to steel.
I'm lucky that people believe me when I'm in character.
I think calling someone a character is a compliment.
This I conceive to be the chemical function of humor: to change the character of our thought.
I still do miss the freedom to play any kind of character I wanted to play.
Failure's not a bad thing. It builds character. It makes you stronger.
Usually, family films have characters speaking with each other with much dignity and respect.
Having your own character in a video game is pretty cool.
Storytelling is about two things; it's about character and plot.
Movies are open doors, and at every door, I change character and life.
Character is power; it makes friends, draws patronage and support and opens the way to wealth, honor and happiness.
Character design, like story design, requires a hook to grab the reader's attention.
All the great writers root their characters in true human behaviour.