Everybody has a role or part to play; if somebody fits the bill, that is what matters.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Everyone plays their own crucial part towards the film.
When I find a role I want to play, I just go after it.
With any part you play, there is a certain amount of yourself in it. There has to be, otherwise it's just not acting. It's lying.
Necessarily, I'm always involved in casting, as any playwright is, because the whole process of putting on a play is a collaborative, organic effort on the part of a bunch of people trying to think alike.
A play is not a play until it's performed, and unless it's a one-person play that is acted, directed and designed by the author, many other people will be deeply involved in the complicated process that leads to its performance.
Actors are responsible to the people we play.
Actors are actors, and there should be a complete fluidity for anyone to play anything.
If you come from a normal family, you immediately start playing the role of a boy, a girl a man or a woman, but I'm sure you'll agree with me that those are only roles, limited roles, at that.
To me, any character that is conflicted inside as well as outside of themselves is always a better role to play.
Well, I think most people understand that there's a big difference between who you are and who, you know, you play.