All cartoon characters and fables must be exaggeration, caricatures. It is the very nature of fantasy and fable.
Because power corrupts, society's demands for moral authority and character increase as the importance of the position increases.
The only difference is that religion is much better organised and has been around much longer, but it's the same story with different characters and different costumes.
I would stay on, but 'General Hospital' honestly doesn't seem to want that relationship with this character at the moment. They want little short doses during sweeps periods.
As for tweeting and texting: impassioned discussions, particularly when they're intimate, don't work in abbreviated script messages. No relationship should begin or end in 140 characters.
I'm drawn to the romantic aspect of a character. It's human emotion. It's much more fun to watch. And it's much more fun to play.
There are relatively few science fiction or fantasy books with the main character being an old person.
Science, almost from its beginnings, has been truly international in character. National prejudices disappear completely in the scientist's search for truth.
My character, Taylor McKessie, is a little bit brighter in the math and science department than I am... okay, a lot.
One of the most obvious parts of my character is the smile, and if I wasn't comfortable in myself then I wouldn't be able to smile so much.
Organic buildings are the strength and lightness of the spiders' spinning, buildings qualified by light, bred by native character to environment, married to the ground.
Fame and success and titles stay with you, but they wear out eventually. In the end, all that you are left with is your character.
If you say one gets influenced watching a character, I think it's foolish. Cinema reflects society; society rarely reflects cinema.
I love people who are inches away from completely falling apart. I think that's a fun, electric character to take on.
The way I approach the character isn't about being gay or straight. It's just about who you love. Gender has very little to do with it.
I love all the 'Twilight' characters. I can watch Kristen Stewart and think, 'I want to be that role someday.'
People ask me to record their answering machines all the time. I love it. It's a miracle to me that people want to hear back those characters.
I don't want to get pigeon-holed into a certain kind of character. I love action roles and the hero, but I want to keep trying something new.
People say they love the characters I've chosen in my career. But I didn't choose anything. I just happened to be working and these were offered to me.
I am a tremendous 'Star Wars' fan; I know the story means an enormous love to me. I love the characters.
I feel like I'm a character already, as in, like, I love dressing up.