Being in 'Us Weekly' does not make you famous.
From Bradley Cooper
If you're a single man and you happen to be in this business, you're deemed a player. But I don't see myself as a ladies' man.
I was pretty as a child and I felt that I wasn't very manly and that plagued me for years.
If you look at anything, there are always comedic moments.
There's got to be something you want to tell and that's the engine which spurs all of the work you have to do in order to create the story, but you have to love some sort of nugget of what you're telling to be a filmmaker.
It's beyond my control who's going to cast me or how you're going to pigeonholed, so for me, it's just I want to keep doing different things because I want to get better, so hopefully I'll be hired to do them.
I think if you live in a black-and-white world, you're gonna suffer a lot. I used to be like that. But I don't believe that anymore.
If I like a song, I'll just keep playing it, and it never gets old.
I loved the college experience of studying.
Personally, I've made myself a very small window of what I enjoy in this business, which is I love being a big part of the storytelling process.
2 perspectives
1 perspectives