Good guy' or 'bad guy', hero or anti hero; doesn't matter to me, what role I play, only the character have something magical.
I love playing characters that are bigger than life and maybe have a darker side that they present to the world. Those are good characters.
I'm a musician. I play harmonica for relaxation. A good way to relax and entertain people. An excellent way to have fun.
It didn't matter how good I was. It was always, 'You're a girl. You can't play with the guys.' It's always been motivation for me.
Seeing a new play in a first-time production is so exciting - when it's good, you want to shout from the rooftops.
A good football team plays offense and defense. You have to be aggressive and disrupt.
I would love to do a good gritty drama, a romantic role. I tend to play bad guys for some reason.
If I'm doing a concert, and I'm having a problem with the audience... I just play a Bob Marley song, and I'm good for the rest of the night.
Terror works like a musical composition, so many instruments, all in tune, playing perfectly together to create their desired effect. Sorrow and horror and fear.
I'd never read 'Lord of the Rings' until I was asked to play Gandalf, so I didn't really know it was a frightfully famous book.
You've got certain guys that just want to be famous and then you've got the real musicians that just love playing music.
Faith has a role to play in life. It is not related to success. It is the other way round. Success is related to faith. Faith comes first.
From Roger Bacon, the 13th century Franciscan who pioneered the scientific method, to George Lemaitre, the 20th century Belgian priest who first developed a mathematical foundation for the 'Big Bang,' people of faith have played a key role in advanci...
The Pledge of Allegiance reflects the truth that faith in God has played a significant role in America since the days of the founding of our country.
Though I was excited about the Sojourner Truth play, it was not reassuring to think that my entire future might depend on the success of that one show.
I'd like now and into the future to play a bigger role not only in Wisconsin and the Midwest, but nationally. I'd like to have an impact.
You have a couple of buddies sleep over, and, you know, you play cops and robbers. That I'm getting paid to do it now is kind of funny.
It was funny on '24' because I'm a Scots-Canadian, and I was working with the great Scottish actor Tony Curran, and we were both playing Russian gangsters.
When I play discos in Belfast or freshers' week in Oxford, there are 1,800 kids dressed as me. It's odd, it's funny, and it pays really well.
I've been lucky enough to play some funny, nasty ladies in my day, and if you can make them foolish, they're even funnier.
A director recommended me for the role on 'Soap.' They said, 'She plays heavy roles, murderesses and the like.' He said, 'On stage, she could be very very funny.'