My preference is that, that day when someone sticks a tripod in front of you with a camera on the top, it is not day one.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
When you live with a photographer, you never have a day off - it was a nightmare.
To have an opportunity to get in front of a camera every single day is just priceless because it gets you closer and closer to being less self-consciousness in front of it and really being human and really making choices and standing by them.
I think how you start the day many times determines what kind of day you're going to have.
Some days are more intense and quiet, and then other days, you feel more relaxed and are able to open up on set. It just depends on what you're doing that day. I like to imagine that all the choices you make during the day that you're doing a particular scene are going to feed into the creation of that scene.
I certainly never expected to be in front of a camera one day of my life.
Single-camera is more relentless because it's eight 14-hour days no matter how you slice it.
Usually, one day in a century rises above the others as an accepted turning point or historic milestone. It becomes the climactic day, or 'the day,' of that century.
I don't think that one day really relates to the next day in life.
One should really use the camera as though tomorrow you'd be stricken blind.
For me, all days are memorable days.