I know that some people work differently, but I have to work from the inside out. It doesn't matter how big the character is, there has to be a truthful core.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
A character is as much about what you do as what you say.
When I look at a character, I never look at the size of the role. I always look at the whole person, no matter how much they're featured in the movie.
How I work is I work from of very character-driven place. And I trust the writers.
The characters I write about are very internal.
I believe in growth - in myself and in the characters I create.
I think it's absolutely essential that the people that work for a company need to feel that they're part of something bigger - that it's not just a job.
Trying to get the sentences right and the structure of the narration right is about as big a job as I can handle. But I also know that if you handle that job properly, everything else just clicks into place.
Every role I've ever taken has never had anything do to with size. It's never been something I've wanted to be cheap about. Luckily, my agents and managers have always supported that.
It is my job to step into different characters.
You can read a character that feels amazing, but if the world around it and all the writing around it - even the way the stage descriptions are written - don't feel just right, then you know there's no point in doing the project. No character is ever bigger than the whole film.
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