Top 44 Quotes & Sayings by Fiona Shaw

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an Irish actress Fiona Shaw.
Last updated on September 18, 2024.
Fiona Shaw

Fiona Shaw is an Irish film and theatre actress. She is known for her roles as Petunia Dursley in the Harry Potter film series (2001–2010), Marnie Stonebrook in the fourth season of the HBO series True Blood (2011), and Carolyn Martens in the BBC series Killing Eve (2018–22).

I loathe bad theater and most theatre is very bad because it's repetitious, unexciting and, dangerously, it is sometimes praised for those things.
People who are good at film have a relationship with the camera.
Once you've done one style, you leave it for a while. — © Fiona Shaw
Once you've done one style, you leave it for a while.
I had a ball doing Harry Potter.
I can hardly decide what plays I should be in.
This whole tribal loyalty seems to have gone.
I think America becomes more disgruntled by going to the movies and having an endlessly good time at them.
I'm not afraid of chaos and I'm happy talking to strangers. I really love not knowing where I'm going.
I certainly had no intention of playing a man.
So I just play the character, I play the lines.
I would say the next imminent hot writers are often the writers from the decade before you were born.
The energy released by it is enormous and it becomes quite addictive, the power between the audience and the actor.
I once saw my mother playing Mary Magdalene in a parish event. But she had to put the role aside in order to go and front the choir who were singing at the same occasion. She left the stage halfway through the Crucifixion.
A relationship is sent by God and accident. — © Fiona Shaw
A relationship is sent by God and accident.
Even when they have nothing, the Irish emit a kind of happiness, a joy.
Like a lot of Irish households we read a lot of Irish history. It was almost Soviet, raising the next generation with a mythic view of their history.
I take the theater seriously in that I loathe it, I'm bored by it.
The word democracy has no meaning. Duty has gone. Only rights remain.
One moment cannot be the most important.
Also, an area that interests me - and it will probably take years to state what I mean - is the period of the rise of democracy, with Tom Paine, which is around the turn of the 18th century into the 19th.
I just think that things should be allowed to run their course, and not turned into a Disney ride.
Theater is dangerously open to repetition. It's exciting when you hit on a new way.
Honestly, I get more recognized for 'Three Men and a Little Lady' than 'Harry Potter'.
Theater dates very quickly.
My mother taught me to read.
To be honest I live among the English and have always found them to be very honest in their business dealings. They are noble, hard-working and anxious to do the right thing. But joy eludes them, they lack the joy that the Irish have.
I'm not on the run from anything and I'm not at all clear about what I'm running towards. But as some great writer put it, I want to be certain that when I arrive at death, I'm totally exhausted.
My mother adores singing and plays piano. My uncle was a phenomenal pianist. My brother John is a double bassist. I used to play the piano, badly, and cello. My brother Peter played violin.
There once was a demographic survey done to determine if money was connected to happiness and Ireland was the only place where this did not turn out to be true.
There is a great relief in experiencing the worst vicariously. — © Fiona Shaw
There is a great relief in experiencing the worst vicariously.
I find it incredibly tedious, hate that it murders itself with its own conservative pomposity.
I enjoy making films, but my heart is in the stage. Every night you have to be on. There's no second take.
Acting doesn't have to be threadbare misery all the time.
A lot of Irish people perform. They perform in drawing rooms. They sing songs and they play piano.
The Americans are very clear, and obsessed with nouns.
There was no professional theater in Cork, but still I did a lot of performing.
There's something about the Irish that is remarkable.
And by endlessly sanitizing our feelings, we actually feed a disgruntled nation.
I would love to write the story of my upbringing in Ireland.
Every generation is obsessed with the decade before they were born.
Irish people are educated not only about artistry but local history. — © Fiona Shaw
Irish people are educated not only about artistry but local history.
I loathe bad theater and most theatre is very bad because its repetitious, unexciting and, dangerously, it is sometimes praised for those things.
Theater is dangerously open to repetition. Its exciting when you hit on a new way.
Now I have begun to get interested in films and I just hope that people start becoming interested in me to do more films.
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