You have to be aware of who you're talking to in an audience.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
But you can't really know your audiences so well.
I've always been really involved in figuring out who my audience is and how to reach them.
You've got to keep your finger on the pulse of what your audience is thinking, and know what they'll accept from you.
I know my audience, and they're not people that the studios know anything about.
I don't try to communicate with my 'audience'. I don't bother with that any more. I used to try to have conversations with people, but it's futile.
It's interesting to watch myself with an audience; I'm trying hard to learn from it.
As any speaker will tell you, when you address a large number of people from a stage, you try to make eye contact with people in the audience to communicate that you're accessible and interested in them.
I want my audience to know me for my work, not because of who I'm dating or what drugs I'm on or what club I went to.
If I'm doing my job as an actor, the audience knows everything I know about the character.
If the people in the audience are talking, you're being ignored. If the people are gazing at you, you've got something they want to hear.