Zitat des Tages von Tom Sturridge:
It's always dangerous to prescribe an idea on other people.
I like to cook and go to Whole Foods.
I'd go as far as it takes. There's never too far. You do what you have to do for your girl.
I didn't have any idea what I wanted to be when I grew up.
Some people are defined by what they do.
If they're a friend, they stick with you through the tough stuff.
I felt that my decisions, whether good or bad, would always be supported by my parents, because I was loved and respected.
In England, theater auditions are gentler experiences. You sit down with the director and talk about the play.
Basically, I was a very serious film fan. I watched a lot of cinema and contemporary and European film.
My core group of friends are all from when I was a kid.
I'm not afraid of not working.
Even the way Mamet describes silences within his plays is different. There are pauses; there are pauses within parentheses; there are pauses before dialogue; there are pauses in the spaces between the dialogue - there's this extraordinary vocabulary of silence which is all there on the page, mapped out.
I don't have a set way of preparing for something. You just have to take it seriously.
I write constantly about everything.
It's not often talked about what a wonderful feeling it is to see someone that you care about love and be loved.
So many things I thought I was doing have fallen apart. Until I've finished filming, I don't believe I have the job.
Scary things are good, aren't they?
To be an English person in my 20s, doing a Broadway show - it's one of the mountains I wanted to climb.
My baby pukes on me. It's life. It's very much a normal life.
There's this weird thing about acting where you have to wait for somebody to ask you to do it; like you have to wait for a director to say it's okay.
I always think that period between the ages of 18 and 24 is such a bizarre stage, and the two people at either end are always very different.
I spend the majority of my life not acting.
'1984' is terrifyingly relevant. It generates a political conversation, but it's an exciting piece of theatre. Every day, there are things to be spawned from Orwell's mind, whether it's in England or America, terrorist-related or government-related.
If I'd been a parent to myself, I would have been scared because I was only ever interested in my own thoughts.
I'm not a very good actor.
There I am, watching Philip Seymour Hoffman, one of my favourite actors in the world, walk into the room dressed up as Father Christmas, being hilarious, and I'm suddenly thinking, 'Where am I?'