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Stephen Moyer Quotes - IQDb - Internet Quotes Database

Quotes from Stephen Moyer


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Personally, I'm a big reader, and I've never wanted any of my favorite novels to be made into movies.


I didn't want to do film or commercials or television.


I love - oh God, I shouldn't say this - I'm really good at bringing orchids back from the dead.


I started a theater company when I was 17.


I think there are worse things for a teen to be enraptured with than 'Twilight.'


I was the classic liberal, left-wing, 'Theater is going to change the world' kind of person. You know, very, very boring.


I'm an English boy. I played a lot of sports growing up, but I never had any kind of workout regimen.


Marmite is my little English touch, and I'm crazy for chutneys.


My character in 'The Caller' is very normal.



Theatre was always my passion.


When you play a character you have to ask yourself, 'Can I make sense of what's happening here? Is this authentic?'


You know, men would much rather run away than talk about stuff, and my default setting has always been, 'If you have an argument, walk out the door.'


I did a lot of musicals when I was young and finally went to drama school to try and get away from doing musicals... and of course the first thing that happened when I got out is I got offered a musical. And then when I got to the Royal Shakespeare Company, which was my next job, I ended up doing a bloody musical!


I used to teach kids when I was younger. When I was about 14 or 15 I started teaching children drama and something that I used to say to them was, 'Don't be afraid.' People would be afraid of forgetting their lines or something.


I was shocked the first time the paps got me in America - when a video camera is put in your face and you're asked questions and 15 people are walking backwards taking your picture. I was coming out of a pizza shop and had my daughter with me.


One of the things that I've been trying to do with my characters, one of the things that does lead to me turning things down, is I don't really want to repeat myself.


There is a difference between looking all right in a shirt and taking the shirt off. The older that us dudes get, the more the paunch has to be worked on. It's hard.


I was a mod when I was a kid. I'd be in Italian pencil-leg trousers with those bowling shoes you wear outside and a Fred Perry polo shirt with a V-neck sweater. It was like an Essex uniform - a very specific look.


Vampires are so old that they don't need to impress anyone anymore. They're comfortable in their own skin. It's this enigmatic strength that's very romantic and old-fashioned. I think it goes back to something of a Victorian attitude of finding a strong man who's going to look after his woman.