I'm enjoying being a woman on-screen.

I'm not afraid of portraying anything on-screen.

As an actress, I want to live many lives on-screen.

When I watch myself on-screen, I always look for the flaws.

I definitely think an on-screen experience is universal, in a way.

I have done my share of looking glamorous on-screen in many films.

In theater, the primary tool for me was voice. On-screen, it's the eyes.

Women look really sexy doing action on-screen, and it is my favorite genre.

I played a bahu for six years on-screen. I really wanted to come out of that.

An actor's off-screen persona should never overshadow his on-screen characters.

I want women on-screen that we all either want to be, or we know, or we recognize.

In marriage, there's a lot of ignoring each other, which is hard to fake on-screen.

I've actually done a lot of on-screen, live-action stuff prior to 'Adventure Time.'

I am older than most of my on-screen colleagues, and the ones behind the scenes, too.

Whenever you have chemistry on-screen, then you have to be very attracted to the person.

If you have a good thing going behind the scenes, you'll have a good thing going on-screen.

I really have never been concerned about being beautiful on-screen. That's just not my jam.

Women are half the population of the world, and yet there are so few female characters on-screen.

I feel, it is essential to see oneself on-screen so as to be a better judge of one's performance.

As an individual, I have no fear of failure... I think that translates on-screen in my performances.

My father has a general rule. He says if I haven't done it in real life I shouldn't do it on-screen.

It is so important for young people to see characters with different mental health challenges on-screen.

Women should not only be doing action on-screen but should be a part of every other aspect of filmmaking.

I just never thought in a million years that I would be, like, sharing a kiss on-screen with Adam Sandler.

I have always stuck to my on-screen image and I have no complaints as I have got some meaty roles coming my way.

I think, more than my husband, my mother-in-law gets excited and proud and what not whenever she sees me on-screen.

As a presenter on 'Daybreak,' I am lucky in that we have a brilliant wardrobe lady who chooses our on-screen clothes.

I resist the idea of there being on-screen chemistry. I think it's something that people like to say without thinking.

The same actor plays the role of a thief and a police officer on-screen. It's not fair to look for role models in them.

I do not want to work to stay busy. I want to feel excited and challenged with each character that I portray on-screen.

People of color and women are increasingly being shown on-screen. For things to be whitewashed just doesn't make sense.

It's not what you see on-screen that makes a performance. It's the things you should never know about - it's the secrets.

There were so few Asians on-screen when I grew up, and the ones who were on-screen weren't given complex characters to play.

Penning 'Omerta' was one of the best experiences. I was amazed at how Hansal Mehta and Rajkummar Rao manifested it on-screen.

I get very excited when I see Govinda on-screen. I love him. What a great actor, there is no better actor than him in the country.

I am not against kissing on-screen but I definitely do not want to be written about for the number of kisses I have had on screen.

Honestly, I don't aspire to be a huge movie star. I really just fell in love with acting... Everything I do on-screen is very subtle.

Age is not a factor when it comes to choosing the kind of roles you want to portray or the kind of clothes you wear for a role on-screen.

People tell me that my appearance in real life is better than on-screen. Perhaps people think I am exactly like the characters I play on TV.

It's amazing how you get to recreate somebody else's life on-screen. It's wonderful when you get responses like, 'You actually look like him.'

For me 'Meet Mila De Rabba' is a very important project since it will break my on-screen villainous image and prove my versatility as an actor.

Every single thing you see on-screen came out of somebody's creativity. It doesn't exist. Nature didn't deliver it to us. Everything had to be dreamed.

Singers put emotions into songs which the actors later replicate on screen. When I know that I can also present myself well on-screen, why not do that?

None of my on-screen roles have been outright negative. They have all been grey, and that is how it is in reality, too. None of us are nice and sweet 24/7.

To be honest, sometimes I'm horrified because you don't really know what you look like. If I really knew what I was doing on-screen, I would try to stop doing it.

Certain aspects of my personality are always going to come out on-screen. I guess that's just me - if they say I'm quirky, I'm quirky. It's better than being boring.

One of the occupational hazards of reviewing year-end biopics with Oscar ambitions is pointing out discrepancies between the real subjects and their on-screen avatars.

I can express the brooding part of myself on-screen. It's kind of fun to get to do the bratty things I really wouldn't do. And then I get to go back to my regular life.

On-screen wardrobes are important. They help create an overall aura, and with local productions being viewed all around the globe, they represent our aesthetics to the world.

The motto of my institute has always been, 'If they can see it, they can be it.' And it's literally true. If we show something on-screen, it will change what happens in real life.

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