Marlon Brando — "I don't believe in regret. I think it's a waste of time."
I don't believe in regret. I think it's a waste of time.
I don't believe in regret. I think it's a waste of time.
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"I'm not a very good person. I'm not a very nice person. I'm not a very happy person. I'm not a very good actor. I'm not a very good human being."
"I'm going to be a plumber. I don't want to be an actor. I don't want to be a movie star. I don't want to be anything. I just want to be myself."
"I'm not a very political person. I just care about people."
"I was never a sex symbol. I was just a guy who got lucky."
"I always felt that the only way to make a movie truly great was to make it a little bit strange."
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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