I find myself gravitating towards drama. It interests me. In the books I read, the paintings I like, it's always the darker stuff.
With a play, you do it and it's gone. Films always date. Television drama always dates. Television comedy, for some reason, seems to go on.
With the opening of the second decade of the twentieth century it seemed that the stage was set for the last act in an unquestioned evolutionary drama.
It's usually human drama that carries with it issues of race or class that attracts me. That was certainly the case with 'No Crossover.'
With every film, I try and give the audiences a little more than the previous film in terms of comedy, action, drama and so on.
Film is drama. You've only two hours, so you lie by exclusion, and try to make up for it by portraying the environment.
It has nothing to do with the emotional demands of a role; I've done comedies that are as draining to me as any drama.
Not having gone to drama school, I always feel like a bit of a fraud, but so far it looks as though I've not been found out.
In the beginning of my career, all I did was drama, and I couldn't get arrested doing comedy; nobody would hire me!
I've always got into stunts; even at drama school, I was falling down trap doors, and swinging in on ropes.
It is expensive to give plays subtitles, especially for a short run, so most new dramas rarely cross the transcontinental bridge.
Opera is credible drama now, and it costs less than going to a football match. What have you got to lose?
I like to do comedy, but I'll be perfectly honest, I prefer to do drama and more character-driven-based stuff, generally.
I remember watching 'The Wire,' because I absolutely adored 'The Wire,' and there were so many secret layers within that drama, and it was just fantastic.
When I was younger and studying acting, I never ever saw myself in the sitcom world; it was drama that really turned me on and still does.
I was at university and I was studying modern drama and studying English, and I just was like, 'I don't wanna be in this place. I wanna be acting.'
I have been out of drama school for 13 years, so there are 13 years' worth of graduates behind me.
I was in the drama club, and I was one of seven co-presidents of the student body. Students elected me - I don't know why!
I think what makes people fascinating is conflict, it's drama, it's the human condition. Nobody wants to watch perfection.
I didn't go to drama school, so I feel like I did all my growing up on 'Hollyoaks.'
I'm not a drama person, but when you can make a movie in song form in three-and-a-half minutes, it's surreal.