You know if something is good because you remember the lines because it is written so well. The rhythm of the speech is spot on.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
A great speech is literature.
The writing is important, but the way you say the line and the pause you give it, the facial expression - all of that is very important.
When you make as many speeches and you talk as much as I do and you get away from the text, it's always a possibility to get a few words tangled here and there.
Shakespeare's work is like a good song: you never really forget the main lines.
When I give a lot of speeches, they're always on the fly. I mean, I know what I'm going to say roughly, but I do not - will not read.
I believe most things can be said in a few lines.
As I've been acting since I was young it's taught me to give a good speech, and, though I say so myself, I did it pretty well.
Good dialogue is very important.
I've found that good dialogue tells you not only what people are saying or how they're communicating but it tells you a great deal - by dialect and tone, content and circumstance - about the quality of the character.
I've always felt, even as a songwriter, that the rhythm of speech is in itself a language for me.
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