TV and film has defined my entire life.

A lot of TV and film commits to one tone.

We have very strict rules about TV and film in my house.

I've been bouncing around from comedy to drama and TV and film.

In those days, the early 1980s, TV and film were interchangeable.

The truth is, unlike TV and film cameras, the theater stage doesn't add 10 pounds.

Games, by nature, have more plot options and non-linear qualities than TV and film.

I kind of got lost down a road of TV and film, so it's great to come back to theatre.

LGBTQIA inclusion in media, especially TV and film, is not just important, it's essential.

I think it's great that we're living in a time when everyone is being represented on TV and film.

People say, 'Oh, you do theater!' And I say, 'Honey, I do theater to get better TV and film roles.'

I really feel like the proper representation of women, in TV and film, is really important and vital.

We get along really well, but TV and film aren't reality. We're best friends, but we do have our fights!

Times are changing, and it's catching on that the roles on TV and film need to reflect its diverse viewers.

For me, as an actor, going from TV to film was interesting because TV and film are two very different things.

By the time I started doing TV and film, I was in my forties, so I wasn't going to do the young up-and-comer.

TV and film are always slipping in political messages, not ones designed to bring us together but to divide us.

With 'Sharknado,' they've got a great mix of TV and film. This is a film that has film impact in the TV medium.

I'd never contemplated being in TV and film. But I love working with athletes and talent and shaping great stories.

With anything, and especially with the pallet of viewers in watching anything on TV and film, you have to entertain them.

I love TV and film and will happily work there if it's good. But I want the ability to choose between things, to have options.

L.A. is so focused on TV and film that theater is kind of an arcane sport. People look at you like you're doing something cute.

I started in high school, and in college, I studied radio, TV, and film. The plan was to be a filmmaker, and it was always comedy.

I had always done broader characters, but going to UCB and speaking to my own voice was important for auditioning for TV and film.

I'd always had the concern that being in commercials would affect my credibility when I was getting started as a TV and film actor.

I don't think there should be any discrimination between TV and film actors. I think our job is to act, irrespective of the medium.

I really have no preference between TV and film. I think that each individual project is its own thing and has a very different style.

I always find that really interesting, you know, when I get to see characters that I love in TV and film and theater around their family.

I think that as television is evolving, the line between TV and film is becoming more and more blurred. This is both a good and bad thing.

Live theatre provides a rush you can't get in film or television. But it is the TV and film work that offers the leisure to go off and do a play.

I didn't expect to pursue acting at all, let alone TV and film, let alone New York or L.A. I was quite content doing Shakespeare out in Wisconsin.

Coming from TV and film, rule number one is that you always service the main character first and foremost. If that's not working, you've got nothing.

In a way, I love being inspired by the production quality that TV and film have got - there's no question about the amount of skill they use to entertain us.

I think people in the U.K. should be concerned about the under-representation of BAME actors in TV and Film, because it is an incorrect reflection of our society.

Stage is all real; it's just as honest except it's bigger. I love stage, I love TV and film, so I think I'll just keep exploring and try to keep a really full picture.

When I've done TV and film, when it's offered to me, I loved doing it, and I would do it again, but the ins and outs of auditioning is - that's time away from my kids.

I've been doing theater for a long time, so that's something I understand. I'm such a babe in the woods when it comes to TV and film. I'm still learning. It's exciting.

There was that sense that as soon as a Northern Irish person opens their mouth, you go, 'Ah, terrorist,' so I refused to do TV and film. Instead, I did theatre for 20 years.

I started in theatre; the first bit of drama I did was amateur dramatics, up until I was 19. Then the TV and film opportunities came along, but now I was just ready to come back.

If anything, being a female has afforded me opportunities on YouTube that I necessarily didn't have in doing traditional comedy and auditioning in TV and film and that whole world.

One thing I really want to do is - I spent ten years in New York doing theater before I moved to L.A. to do TV and film. I'd really like to go to back New York and do some theater.

Part of what I like about the best villains in TV and film is when you feel sorry for them, and that makes you feel even worse for feeling guilty about wanting them to succeed, in some way.

Even after I became involved in theater and involved in TV and film, I had this sort of idea that Hollywood was off limits. There was something about L.A., the mystique of it and fear of it.

I get that people want more diversity in TV and film, and I stand by that. I stand in solidarity with better diversity in TV shows, especially for Asian actors. I agree with that 100 per cent.

Variety has always been in my mind: to do something totally different. I've had a parallel career since the beginning. On one track, the TV and film, the other, theatre, but they never crossed.

My childhood dream was always to be on Broadway. I wanted to end up in TV and film. It's kind of flipped, and I'm not mad about it, but my childhood dream is Broadway and I want to end up there.

TV and film were always governing passions of mine, and that first wave of great HBO shows in the early years of the millennium was feeding my desire for fiction more than the books I was reading.

Theatre is the principal job of an actor. An actor's job is to tell a story to someone in a room. TV and film can be great and I really love doing it, but it is a different way of telling a story.

I love theatre because that is my foundation. So, if I had to make a choice in terms of where I get the most fulfillments, it would be theatre. The reaction is so immediate, unlike with TV and film.

I always found growing up that, even inspiring female characters or complex female characters in TV and film... I often found that their complexity was actually just another facet of their sexuality.

Share This Page