Every project has to stand on its own. It's a different identity within each project, and I feel like that's the way it should be.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
You never undertake a project because you think other people will like it - because that way lies madness - but rather because you believe in it.
These days i tend to use one project I do as a kind of offshoot to the next.
The way I look at a solo project is, I create what I want with whoever I want.
When you start a new project, you wonder whether it's the right choice.
When you take on a project, you have to be certain that you can make the best version of whatever it is you're given.
Some projects go as you hope or imagine, and some change or reveal themselves in a different way; it depends.
But I also think that the more you reason collectively about what the project should be at the beginning of the process, the more you can improvise later.
I see each project as an opportunity to grow as a person and as an actor.
As long as you're in an environment where the worth of the project isn't based on the project but what its predecessors did, it's not truly inclusive.
I don't think in terms of projects.