I much prefer the company of the crew, the sort of 'blue-collar working person.' I much more have that sensibility than what the public perceives as what a typical actor would have.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
As an actor... at some point you've got to forget that the crew's there in order to do your job.
There's a real separation between actors and all the other functions of Hollywood. If you're an actor you're somehow not a member of the crew. You're somehow more special. I hate that.
When you are an actor, you have to stay inside this world, but when you are with the crew, on the outside, you are in the dirt, working through all the issues. It's just a different way of working, and I think I preferred it.
The actor's role in the community is quite unlike anyone else's. Businessmen, for example, don't take their clothes off or cry in front of strangers in the course of their work. Actors do.
I think a lot of actors feel like outsiders or miscreants. This profession provides an opportunity to play out all the different parts of ourselves.
Actors are people who are doing a job they want to do, which isn't the case for many of the people who watch what we do.
There's a lot of directors who were actors, so they have the sensibility of an actor, which sometimes helps.
You have to understand that crew members make movies so they're seeing a lot of actors all the time in their career acting.
I don't like other actors much. The industry tends to attract insecure, needy people.
When I work on a film, I always tend to relate to the crew.
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