Marlon Brando — "I'm not a very political person. I just care about people."
I'm not a very political person. I just care about people.
I'm not a very political person. I just care about people.
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"All I want to be is normally insane."
"I don't think I'm a particularly good actor, I'm a character actor."
"You don't just give up. You don't just let things happen. You fight for what you believe in and you fight for your friends."
"Privacy is not something that I'm willing to give up for the sake of celebrity."
"I don't have any regrets. I've lived my life the way I wanted to."
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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