I was always a character actor. I just looked like Little Red Riding Hood.
Give me a character that has an heroic quality, and I'll go there.
And what's interesting about him as a comic character is that the custard pie hardly ever ends up on his face.
I write characters and stories that move me, and I write from the heart.
I tell about some of the female characters from the Bible so girls can be inspired and empowered and uplifted.
People do not seem to realize that their opinion of the world is also a confession of character.
People seem not to see that their opinion of the world is also a confession of character.
People do not seem to realise that their opinion of the world is also a confession of their character.
The worst thing you can do as a performer is to judge your character in any way, positively or negatively.
The danger with playing someone tough is that the character can become two-dimensional and mean and nobody likes her.
I try to create as many circumstances outside of set that help me fall into character when I get onto set.
I like to approach comedy from character, to have the stakes for the individuals in the story be very high.
I always aspire to that, where it feels like the film was made by the characters as opposed to the filmmakers. I try to be invisible.
Prison make you a better judge of character. You pick up on people much faster.
I tend to favour films that have multiple plot and story lines, multiple characters and ensemble pieces.
I like characters who have blind spots and are full of themselves, but there also needs to be vulnerability.
Maybe I'll just become a cartoon character because there's nothing left for me to do in an R-rated comedy.
I think people throughout the world identify with my characters.
If you do not know the laws of right conduct, you cannot form your character.
Two characters and sexy banter do not a book make, damn it.
I'd be more interested in doing a smaller, character driven thing, rather than another action picture.