Quotes from Vincent D'Onofrio


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At our best, it's a good experience but we do 22 episodes a year, so there are some clunkers.


When I played Robert Howard in 'The Whole Wide World', I was struggling with it. There's this dual thing where you feel real good about being able to play this juicy part, and then there's constant shame: 'Who am I to pretend to know who this guy was? Who am I to represent this guy for people who never knew him?'


It doesn't need to be a No 1 show, it just needs to be good.


If you try to go beyond your interests just for the sake of pretensions or wealth, your art becomes less legitimate.


I've never tried to be something I'm not.


I'll be working the rest of my life because I'm a character actor and don't have to worry about box office.


I want every episode to feel like we still haven't done this right yet.


I think that being a producer is business and being an actor is art.


I found my niche as a character actor, and I've never felt like a movie star or teen idol and never wanted to.


Evil changes everybody!


But the one thing that I did do was establish myself as a good actor.


It's pretty simple, pretty obvious: that people's first impressions of people are really a big mistake.


The only thing I do worry about is that the more films I do the more visible I am going to become as a personality because of press and because of the sheer quantity of films.


Some scenes you juggle two balls, some scenes you juggle three balls, some scenes you can juggle five balls. The key is always to speak in your own voice. Speak the truth. That's Acting 101. Then you start putting layers on top of that.


I'm a character actor, and I made a choice when I was young, after 'Mystic Pizza', not to go for the mainstream stuff, and to do a more eclectic kind of route.


The search for the truth is not for the faint hearted.


I took a route of acting, rather than starmaking, so it cost me a lot financially.


And I have been able to establish this sort of decent reputation as being a decent character actor.


To me the definition of true masculinity - and femininity, too - is being able to lay in your own skin comfortably.


All of us are trying to achieve 100 percent in our work. That's all we struggle to do. We never do, but we never stop trying until the day we die. It's that struggle to achieve 100 percent, that's where our performance lies, that's what the audience gets. They get the struggle.