Explore popular quotes and sayings by a British actor Naveen Andrews.
Last updated on November 24, 2024.
Naveen William Sidney Andrews is a British-American actor. He is best known for his role as Sayid Jarrah in the television series Lost (2004–2010), for which he was nominated for a Golden Globe Award and a Primetime Emmy Award, as well as winning a Screen Actors Guild Award along with the cast. He has also appeared in films such as The English Patient (1996), Mighty Joe Young (1998), Rollerball (2002), Bride and Prejudice (2004), Planet Terror (2007), The Brave One (2007), and Diana (2013). In 2022, he starred in the miniseries The Dropout.
Los Angeles is the only place that I can honestly say I have ever called home.
My mum made a conscious decision not to teach me any Indian languages so I wouldn't talk with an accent.
I've always liked women who are older. They seem to know who they are, and they've lived. They've got soul, and that's very attractive.
I think that reality TV is so bad. It is a tool by the media to not make people think.
I saw the pilot, you know, because you have to have some knowledge of the piece that you are in, but I never saw an episode of 'Lost.'
If you don't take the chance to live life, what can you say at the end of it?
The unknown is always frightening.
I have absolutely no interest in the tabloids or reporting of the royal family.
If a character's suddenly spouting information that's supposed to bring you up to date, it can seem artificial or contrived.
Whenever I go back to London, I have this horrible feeling that something bad will happen, and I won't be able to get back to America. It's a nightmare feeling.
Older women know who they are, and that makes them more beautiful than younger ones. I like to see a face with some character. I want to see lines. I want to see wrinkles.
You can do things with TV that you just can't do on film. There's so much more time: there's the opportunity for development, and you can let things lay dormant for a period. You can't really do that in two hours or three hours in a movie that often, I would say.
I can't change a light bulb.
I'm not an academic, but I've always loved poetry since I've been small.
I think any actor should be aware of where they're starting to stretch into what's not truthful.
I was always in trouble from an early age. I had a fraught relationship with my parents, who were very traditional. Doing plays at school was a joyous release.
That's what we have with the Old Testament and the New Testament: good storytelling.
A slice of hot, buttered toast is the perfect meal. It's not too much and not too little, and it gives you just the right buzz.
It's always been very important to me to try to do projects which are breaking new ground.
Only when I came to America did I think of myself as British.
The older I get, the more I'm prepared to do things for the money.
Men are the weaker sex and retain their immaturity, it seems, to the grave. It's like a built-in design fault. You can't do anything about it.
Any human being is this wonderful conglomeration of experiences and behaviors, if you like - some of them healthy, some of them not so healthy.
If you've grown up feeling unattractive, I don't think you ever lose that. It never goes.
With 'Lost,' some members of the cast would literally open the script and find out that they were dead. I mean, that's quite sad, really.
In England, the class system is about a thousand years old, and it's not going to change any time soon.
I can't emphasise enough how grateful I am to have come upon sobriety.
I couldn't bloody believe a prime-time TV show would have an Iraqi ex-Republican Guard torturer as a main character.
Personally, I think it would have been really nice, if 'Lost' had just one season.
The great lesson I got from my parents is how not to treat your children. To break that chain, even if I don't do anything else, at least I've done that.
When the world says, 'Jump,' you gotta jump. It's like me moving to America when I was 29. I just did it. And now it's a home. You can't plan those things.
We seem to be the victims of religious dogma, both from the Christian Right here and, of course, in the East with the rise of Islamic fundamentalism.
I never felt at home in London, because people were constantly telling me I didn't belong here, so after a while, you tend to believe that.
Just because I never went to university doesn't mean you can't read, although I do feel a bit uneducated from time to time.
I'm never going to wake up and look in the mirror and think, 'Yes, I'll go out and meet people.' Most of the time, you wake up, look in the mirror, and want to give up. And that doesn't change. It isn't awful; it's just the way I feel.
I think you can achieve things in television that you can't achieve on film, and I think we managed to do a lot of that in the first season of 'Lost.'
I can only perceive the royal family as an entity historically. I think I know more about the royal family from the Plantagenets in the 14th Century than the modern family.
They were both academics, but my dad had to get a job on the railway, and my mum had to get a job in the Post Office. It was pretty hard in terms of the racism they had to endure.
It is not easy to get parts in mainstream films for most people of color. Hollywood and British writers are not writing parts for us, or the directors are not interested in casting us in parts that are color-blind.
I still have a great friendship with my eldest son's mum. She's my mate. We have this wonderful son who's 6 ft. 3, gorgeous, and I'm his dad. I've not been a total failure.
I think I may have failed at a lot of things, but the one thing I can say, and that I'm proud of, is that I am a good parent.
My parents moved to England with that immigrant ethos of self-betterment, but I don't think they expected the kind of grief they experienced.
Let's just say I was really bad. Now I have grown into myself. I have changed.
We emphasize our differences by nationality, race and financially. [...] It's our common humanity that defines us.
In general, I try to avoid anything that I'm in. I've been that way for awhile. I don't know why. You have to watch, professionally, the things that you're required to watch, but it's not something that I would sit down and watch, again and again.
Lets just say I was really bad. Now I have grown into myself. I have changed.
People have souls, and we all accept that cities have souls, too. It's why the locations are so important.
TV is an extraordinary medium. You can do things with TV that you just can't do on film. There's so much more time, there's the opportunity for development, and you can let things lay dormant for a period. You can't really do that in two hours or three hours in a movie, that often, I would say.