Marlon Brando — "I don't like to be constrained. I think it's stifling."
I don't like to be constrained. I think it's stifling.
I don't like to be constrained. I think it's stifling.
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"Acting is the expression of a neurotic impulse. It's a bum's life."
"I always felt that the only way to make a movie truly great was to make it a little bit strange."
"The more sensitive you are, the more certain you are to be brutalized, develop scabs, never evolve. Never allow yourself to feel anything, because you always feel too much."
"I'm not interested in being a star. I'm interested in being an actor."
"Most of the world is like a mental institution, a big insane asylum."
American actor whose A Streetcar Named Desire (1947) and On the Waterfront (1954) defined Method acting and reshaped 20th-century film performance. Closely associated with James Dean (Method-acting peer and protégé) and Montgomery Clift (Method contemporary and friend). For an intellectual contrast, see Laurence Olivier, British classical-trained actor — Olivier's technical, externally-constructed approach to acting is the precise opposite of the Method's emotional-recall internalism — the canonical 'Method vs classical' binary 20th-century acting pedagogy is organized around. Olivier reportedly told a frustrated Hoffman: 'Try acting, my dear boy'.
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