Top 68 Quotes & Sayings by John Rhys-Davies

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Welsh actor John Rhys-Davies.
Last updated on September 18, 2024.
John Rhys-Davies

John Rhys-Davies is a Welsh actor best known for portraying Sallah in the Indiana Jones movies and Gimli in The Lord of the Rings trilogy. His other roles include Michael Malone in the 1993 TV series The Untouchables, Vasco Rodrigues in the mini-series Shōgun, Professor Maximillian Arturo in Sliders, King Richard I in Robin of Sherwood, General Leonid Pushkin in the James Bond film The Living Daylights, and Macro in I, Claudius. In voice acting, he portrayed Treebeard in The Lord of the Rings trilogy, Cassim in Aladdin and the King of Thieves, Ranjan's father in The Jungle Book 2, Macbeth in Gargoyles, Man Ray in SpongeBob SquarePants, Hades in Justice League, and Tobias in Freelancer.

Welsh - Actor | Born: May 5, 1944
Actors are always looking for actor-proof parts. A part so good you can't screw it up!
Actually, I'm addicted to science fiction. Let me make my diction clear - I love sci-fi.
I am a believer in the evolutionary process, and yet I have sympathy for the friends of mine who are creationists. I don't find the positions incompatible. — © John Rhys-Davies
I am a believer in the evolutionary process, and yet I have sympathy for the friends of mine who are creationists. I don't find the positions incompatible.
Sometimes a writer just needs a hook.
Sometimes you learn more from films that aren't terribly successful and, indeed, sometimes you learn more from real disasters than you do from the ones that succeed.
The script of 'Shogun' was so tight that you could not take a word out of a sentence, you could not take a sentence out of a scene, and you certainly couldn't take out a scene without putting ripples right through the back or the front of the overall story.
When the writers themselves are a bit out of control, and their lives are collapsing around them, they seem to rejoice in misery and celebrate the wrong sort of things.
I enjoy acting. It's not that I begin to think I'm getting better. I now fully know that I've made no improvement whatsoever since I was 20. I can live with it.
I used to fly airplanes myself, so being above the ground doesn't worry me too much.
Basically, theater or film is a dangerous industrial environment.
I found it marvelous that the great supporters of America in Europe are, of course, those countries that American consistency and firmness in the Cold War ended up liberating.
I do not want to see a society where, should I ever have any, my granddaughters have their fingernails pulled out because they are wearing nail varnish.
Films are fun, but life is much richer. — © John Rhys-Davies
Films are fun, but life is much richer.
Peter Jackson and Steven Spielberg are men at the top of their game, and Jackson especially is going to change the nature of film-making.
I can't give a soundbite for love or money.
To experience the unique sense of elation that you have when your child is sleeping on your chest in an incomparable emotion.
When you think about a walking tree, laughter is the response.
Once you've got a child to the point that they've discovered books, they're safe. There's a world of the imagination that when they're hurt or upset, they can move into, and it is wonderful.
I have a lot of respect for aspects of Islam, but I would not choose to live in a theocratically organised Muslim society.
Many do not understand how precarious Western civilization is and what a joy it is. From it, we get real democracy. From it, we get the sort of intellectual tolerance that allows me to propound something that may be completely alien to you.
Just think about it: in every shop in the reading world since 1956, there has been two feet of book-space devoted to Tolkien.
I'm a little smarter than most.
With a bad script and even the best cast, the most you can hope for is to turn a sow's ear into a silk purse.
Faith is not a rational thing, and yet to understand the universe, rationality alone will not give it to us. Our understanding of the universe must transcend the rational.
We live in a modest system, a galaxy called the Milky Way. If we named every star in the Milky Way and put them in the Hollywood telephone directory and stacked those telephone directories up, we'd have a pile of telephone directories 70 miles high.
In the film world, we can all be heroes. In the real world, where heroism can cost you your life or the life of the ones you love, people aren't so willing to make those sacrifices. When they do, they are set apart from the rest of us.
Intellectually, now, I believe that it is a complete vanity to say positively there is no God.
I think your children are your measure of success, regardless of work and career.
Actors endow the villain in fiction with a warmth and quality that makes them memorable. I think we like fictional villains because they're the Mr. Hyde of our own dreams. I've met a few real villains in my time, and they weren't the least bit sympathetic.
If you've gotta follow a fashion, pick a good fashion, I say, yes.
I think I have more stamps in my passport than most stamp collectors have in their collections.
Hollywood is a far safer place to work than working abroad, because of the skill level, and because of the safety considerations that experience and unionization have created.
When I looked further into my mother's history, I realised that her anxieties and her neuroses could be accounted for by facts from a very early age. Her parents, William Henry Jones and Sarah Emily, were desperately poor.
I like heroes, and would like to be a hero myself. I suppose we all want that.
The word 'career' and 'actor' really don't fit in the same paragraph, let alone sentence. There is no career structure for actors.
Western Europeans are not having any babies.
There's nothing like the discipline of having to work on a cold film set on the Danubian plain in Bulgaria. Boy, does it get cold.
If you cannot have fun on a set and enjoy what you're doing, you're better off giving it up. — © John Rhys-Davies
If you cannot have fun on a set and enjoy what you're doing, you're better off giving it up.
When you get back to fundamental questions - 'Why should anything exist?' A, I'm not sure what the answer is in terms of the science, and B, I'm not sure that science can even ask that question.
A solitary child growing up in Africa, you're really quite dependent on books.
I was offered the opportunity to narrate the Catholic bible, and it was something I really wanted to be involved with.
If I had a bloody tattoo for every film I'd done, I'd be a walking billboard.
There is a demographic catastrophe happening in Europe that nobody wants to talk about, that we daren't bring up because we are so cagey about not offending people racially.
My parents were always Welsh-speaking and very proud of Wales.
'Shogun' was a mini-series, so even though it went on television, we filmed it like a movie.
Villains are a lot of fun. My villains have a lot of tongue-in-cheek. They are sometimes conscious of and a little bit gleeful of their villainy.
It's not hard to get people to take a premise and accept it.
As I come towards the end of my life, you get to see things in a slightly different perspective. — © John Rhys-Davies
As I come towards the end of my life, you get to see things in a slightly different perspective.
People have become disillusioned with Parliament, and that threatens democracy.
The universe starts off with the Big Bang theory, and the first thing that emerged from the Big Bang is essentially hydrogen and then helium. And that's what combusts in stars. Finally, stars implode, and they build heavier elements out of that. And those heavier elements are reconstituted in the heart of other stars, eventually.
No one should be allowed to stand for Parliament without proof that he has taken responsibility for other people.
I love a good safari.
How stupid do you have to be to imagine that you can turn 'The Lord Of The Rings' into a film script?
To be an actor for 30-odd years trying to become recognized, and to end up playing a full prosthetic and a character 3 foot 9', or something like that, is... well, it just shows that you can get actors to do anything.
I've always been attracted to films which explore the qualities of courage.
Spying is a like a game of chess: Sometimes you have to withdraw, sometimes you have to sacrifice one of your pieces to win - preferably a knight rather than a king or queen.
I'd love to spend more time on the Isle of Man. I love the anonymity of putting on a boiler suit and going down to buy parts for the compressor. And Norman Wisdom's a neighbour; I salute him occasionally.
Given the fact that I have a family and responsibilities, it's the mark of a man to find the courage to do what is right in the face of oppressive evil.
I think 'The Lost World' could've been a successful movie except for the fact that it pre-dated the good special effects and computer graphics.
I count myself a a rationalist and a skeptic with a very conscious awareness of my indebtedness to Western Christian civilization, and I am a fairly passionate defender of it.
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