Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American actor Paul Guilfoyle.
Last updated on December 18, 2024.
Paul Vincent Guilfoyle is an American television and film actor. He was a regular cast member of the CBS crime drama CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, on which he played Captain Jim Brass from 2000 to 2014. He returned for the series finale, "Immortality", in 2015. He also returned for two episodes in the sequel CSI: Vegas.
I sometimes improvise, and that's what I call 'massaging the character.'
The thing that attracted me to 'CSI' is that these guys are always professional, but underneath, it's teeming with a heavy shadow. Maybe even some decadence and some weirdness with certain characters! And that always intrigued me as an actor.
I think everyone, all of us, are complicated people. We have jobs that require us to be a certain way. We all do. Unfortunately, our jobs overtake our personality, but that is the world. We live in a conundrum. You have to keep it together.
Strive to be authentic all the time. That's sort of my philosophy on life, which applies to acting.
It's exciting to think that something I'm involved in is touching so many people in so many cultures.
I look forward to the end of all this money-making part of the career, to be truthful.
Acting is constant exploration.
Some of the best movies made about crime are those where the crime solver can get inside the head of the serial killer, and those are the techniques we use in C.S.I.
American shows don't always translate, but this one has and speaking for myself I'm quite glad for it.
Well I think that the mind of a serial killer and the mind of the detectives represent the duality we face as people.
The worst acting is about imitation.
I don't know what an audience wants to see but I know what I like to see.
I've always thought really good artists in general are overqualified. You're paid to stand there and do a line, but the guy has probably gone to drama school... but they have developed it to be just, like, one specific line.
You know, dramas are much more expensive to do than say a comedy, so any kind of deficit like that is picked up on when it comes time for them to pick up new shows.
It isn't always hard work that does the job.
The real rub is finding that authentic self and it's not something that's going to come to you overnight.