Top 53 Quotes & Sayings by Ben Whishaw

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English actor Ben Whishaw.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
Ben Whishaw

Benjamin John Whishaw is an English actor and producer. After winning a British Independent Film Award for his performance in My Brother Tom (2001), he was nominated for an Olivier Award for his portrayal of the title role in a 2004 production of Hamlet. This was followed by television roles in Nathan Barley (2005), Criminal Justice (2008) and The Hour (2011–12) and film roles in Perfume: The Story of a Murderer (2006), I'm Not There (2007), Brideshead Revisited (2008), and Bright Star (2009). For Criminal Justice, Whishaw received an International Emmy Award and received his first BAFTA Award nomination.

The most amazing thing is when you find yourself watching someone in the cafe or something doing something weird. It's amazing what people do, isn't it, when you just look at them, when you take the time to look.
I love films. I love music. I love poetry and stories. All of that I feel... I sort of get very excited and fed by.
I think I have a degree of confidence, but I also have terrible insecurity, like anybody does. — © Ben Whishaw
I think I have a degree of confidence, but I also have terrible insecurity, like anybody does.
The criminal justice system, like any system designed by human beings, clearly has its flaws.
My intuition comes up with better stuff than my head, I think.
I love the characters I've had the opportunity to play.
I'm a fairly private person.
One of the things I find very difficult about theatre is the repetition - that something can slide away from your original intentions.
What I notice about people who are gifted in filmmaking is that they're great thinkers. They engage with big ideas and they engage with people.
Filmmakers tell stories to explore human nature, which is always a flawed thing.
I think being very thin has had a lot to do with how I've been cast.
The thing I love most about acting is that your capacity evolves as you evolve as a human being.
I am a typical Libran. I tend to see two sides of everything. — © Ben Whishaw
I am a typical Libran. I tend to see two sides of everything.
I've gone on workout regimes, but I seem to have a system that is very resistant to changing.
For me, it's important to keep a level of anonymity.
I love taking on other people's words. They are much more interesting to me than my own.
When I finished my A-levels, I assumed I'd be able to get work as an actor. But I couldn't. I didn't get an audition. Nothing. So I thought I'd better train and then the parts would come.
It's fun to pretend you're good at something you know you wouldn't be good at in real life.
I'm not tortured and neurasthenic - I'm really not.
I'm really hopeless with technology - I don't even have a computer.
I think that sometimes in theater, I don't prepare much beyond going to the rehearsals.
I don't have any ambition to make lots of money or win an Oscar or anything like that. It's not about that for me.
My favorite Bond films are the really early ones, the first ones in fact, like 'Dr. No' and 'From Russia with Love.'
The thing I love about acting is that you can bring something very personal into the open and at the same time remain hidden because you're always playing a character in a story that someone else has imagined. You're always protected.
Keats himself spoke about how Shakespeare was capable of erasing himself completely from the characters he had created. As an actor, that is what I'm trying to do.
The thing about acting is that it's fairly random. At the end of the day you take what drifts past you or what's given to you.
I do get stopped on the street, although rarely. And they always have something lovely to say.
I find it really hard to say anything coherent or interesting about the work I do.
I reckon domesticated cats have a pretty good life.
I find it weird that people want to know about you.
We are so mired in the complexity of our reactions to other people that when you come across someone who is asocial, there is a simplicity that is refreshing.
I don't think I am especially interested in celebrities, but I love talking about what is going on with people and why they do what they do.
I don't think anyone can walk through the world in a state of vulnerability all the time, can they?
I used to collect knick-knacks, like wizards, trolls and little buddhas, and arrange them like precious things on a shelf.
Even today, England is a very repressed, repressive country, and there's pressure to be kind of a certain way, so people do things that ultimately make them sad. — © Ben Whishaw
Even today, England is a very repressed, repressive country, and there's pressure to be kind of a certain way, so people do things that ultimately make them sad.
I'd like to have a go at directing.
I would have loved to have been a painter or a sculptor. I'm still fascinated by those things.
When you have a character to work with, you carry them around in a strange way - they make you look at the world in a different way.
In film, I find it very useful always to do some preparation before you start rehearsals or start shooting, because there's so much that's against you on a film set.
I wish that the arts were better supported, and you can't say that enough times, but I also believe that whatever happens, artists will keep going.
I was quite a shy child - not chronically, but I tended to blend into the background.
I think the sensation of being moved by a piece of art is something that is really good for a person's soul.
Your one certainty in life, your power as a human being, is that you have a choice in every situation about what you do next and about how you take what has happened to you.
As an actor you have total rights to privacy and mystery, whatever your sexuality, whatever you do. I don't see why that has to be something you discuss openly because you do something in the public eye. I have no understanding of why we turn actors into celebrities.
I love films. I love music. I love poetry and stories. All of that I feel… I sort of get very excited and fed by. — © Ben Whishaw
I love films. I love music. I love poetry and stories. All of that I feel… I sort of get very excited and fed by.
I don’t think that actors are necessarily any more uncomfortable in their skin than anyone else. I suppose I feel more comfortable in my skin now, but you’re always playing a character, aren’t you? You tell different versions of yourself to different people and vice versa. Here, or in the photo shoot or wherever, it’s a representation of you. It’s not you-you. That’s how you get through it.
Dustin Hoffman also never does the same thing twice which is totally stimulating because you're always getting something new from him. You never really know what he's going to do next, so you have to be on your toes.
I can be shy, but I’m not really. I try to be better at overcoming these things people have said.
I was quite a shy child – not chronically, but I tended to blend into the background.
I always feel I am in the dark. You are never finished... it is not as if you can look back and think: ah... I know what I am talking about. You are only as good as your last job and are always struggling and striving and you never quite get to where you want to be.
I've been out to LA a couple of times but, over there, the Grenouille in me always comes to the surface. I feel completely terrified, totally flummoxed, like I don't understand what the hell is going on. I've no desire at all to go back there.
Dustin Hoffman takes such pleasure in what he does and there's nothing tense about him. He exudes joy and passion for what he's doing and that infects everyone. It certainly put me at ease coming to work with him every day. I felt his confidence and freedom rubbed off. He doesn't censor himself or stop an idea because he thinks it might be wrong.
My intuition comes up with better stuff than my head, I think.
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