Top 79 Quotes & Sayings by Robert Carlyle

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Scottish director Robert Carlyle.
Last updated on December 3, 2024.
Robert Carlyle

Robert Carlyle is a Scottish actor. His film work includes Trainspotting (1996), The Full Monty (1997), The World Is Not Enough (1999), Angela's Ashes (1999), The Beach (2000), 28 Weeks Later (2007), and Yesterday (2019). He has been in the television shows Hamish Macbeth, Stargate Universe, and Once Upon a Time. He won the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role for The Full Monty and a Gemini Award for Stargate Universe, and was nominated for an Emmy Award for his work in Human Trafficking (2005).

I loved cinema while growing up and, for the longest time, wanted to be a director.
I hate the word 'hippy.'
A lot of my work is with children and there's a reason for that, because they really level you. — © Robert Carlyle
A lot of my work is with children and there's a reason for that, because they really level you.
People in Scotland appreciate homegrown talent, but it's getting harder and harder to get films made in Britain.
I feel like I'm the luckiest man on the planet.
I rant and rave about noise pollution.
Vancouver's a very child friendly city, there's... no doubt about that.
Of course, I love chats with various actors about the process and how they do it. To me, if it's not on the camera, if it's not there, it's not worth it. It really just isn't worth it.
The U.K. and the U.S. are very different countries, and it really shows in the television.
I've really enjoyed my work in television, but the problem for me is the turnover of directors every week.
I like to be working and moving - the worst thing you can do to me is stick me in a room all day while you're lighting a shot. That just kills me.
Acting is a really insular thing.
Each performance and each film is what it is. It's right and belongs within that moment. You look at it and try to make it fit your particular part of your character and your particular film.
I don't take a great deal of interest in party politics. Social politics interests me a great deal more. — © Robert Carlyle
I don't take a great deal of interest in party politics. Social politics interests me a great deal more.
I owe my father everything.
Every actor I think has got their own number of takes that they like, you know. Some actors like to go all day, you know on the one scene and some actors want to take two takes. I personally like four.
I think I have a natural, if I can say that, got a kind of natural ability in comedy.
When I look back at it now, my past and the way I grew up, I grew up on communes.
The quality of TV drama nowadays is getting better and better. They've had to invent a new term for it: 'high-end television.'
The script will point you in certain directions and I go the opposite if I can. I try do do one thing and tell a different story with my eyes. I believe what's more interesting is always what's not being said.
Anyone that knows me knows what I'm about, and I'm very much a British actor, a European actor.
There are a lot of things that make up a performance, a lot of technical things. It isn't always just about pulling it up from the darkest recesses of your mind or your heart. It's your experience and your observation.
The more people know about an actor the less convincing they become. A bit of mystery's a good thing.
I love sci-fi because it leads in the imagination, and I always say it has the most intelligent fans in the world.
I often have scripts sent to me with allegedly Scottish characters where I end up telling them, 'You're going to have to rethink this whole thing!'
Bullying is a terrible, terrible thing.
The thing I miss the most about Scotland is the football.
The darker the character, the more interesting.
I'm in four different films this year, and I have four different accents. I sound different in every film. You have to love a character to play it well, and change in my work is what I want.
To pursue a career in Hollywood you have to have a personality bypass. Look at the top 20 stars in the world - there's probably only two actors among them. Hollywood's not about you as an actor. It's about your currency, what you 'bring to the table'. And I've never been one to jump through hoops for anyone.
It depends who the director is you know, I mean Ken Loach for instance. I've done up to 32 takes with him.
Hunger's a great spur.
I'd work with Danny Boyle every day of the week. No matter what he was doing I would do that.
People go to the movies to watch a film and all they're thinking about is the actress's cellulite they saw in a magazine.
It took a long time for me to accept I was an actor, a professional actor, and that, actually, I make a living out of this.
In troubled times the last thing you want to do is to stick your money into a film. It's such a gamble.
A lot of Scots have settled in Canada over the years and it's a very easy place for Scots - they understand us, we understand them.
I never rehearse. Never! I think it's a waste of time. — © Robert Carlyle
I never rehearse. Never! I think it's a waste of time.
If there's anything you want to ask your parents, ask them before they go, because once they go, they're gone.
I used to be a rabid reader, but now it's scripts or nothing - network television is quite relentless, and you can't drop the ball.
I have a reputation for being an improvisational actor, which is true, but I also know what I'm doing so that if the improvisational strand doesn't work I can go back to what I know's already there.
Acting, the arts in general, is a magnet for the wounded of society.
To be honest I don't think I was any great shakes as a theatre actor because everything I was doing was really small in size - intimate.
I want to keep audiences off balance, so they don't know who I am or how to take me. If I duck and weave, as Frank Bruno might say, I'll have a longer shelf life.
I've always taken my love of children from my father. He was a children magnet. Suddenly, having my first child hit home what my dad went through.
We met in Cracker. I played a maniac fan who murders a policeman and she did my makeup. I thought anyone interested in me looking like that must have genuinely liked me.
In the late '70s, maybe just before I started, there was still an attitude that if you did film you didn't do TV and vice versa, but that's gone now.
I was 16 when I was in a band, for about 10 minutes. I went off and did acting after that. So it was a wee moment for me when I sang.
I do tend to divide my childhood into darkness and light, and the first seven years were certainly the darkness. — © Robert Carlyle
I do tend to divide my childhood into darkness and light, and the first seven years were certainly the darkness.
Biologically, I'm lucky - an angular face and dark colouring which shows up well on camera.
My dad was rubbish at all other aspects of his financial life, but he's pretty good at paying the rent.
I'd love to do a Columbo-type detective character in a series.
Anyone who knows anything about me knows that I am a very patriotic guy, in terms of my Scottishness and my roots.
I'd totally be attracted to a geek girl!
A lot of the characters I play have problems, they are marginalised, they have serious psychological problems, problems with relationships, with childhood. These are big subjects, big subjects. You can't balk at work like that. As an actor, that's as good as it gets.
My first love is art, and I see a lot of things in an artistic way.
Acting is probably the greatest therapy in the world. You can get a lot stuff out of you on the set so you don't have to take it home with you at night. It's the stuff between the lines, the empty space between those lines which is interesting.
I'm not someone who believes in wasting my vote.
I just don't like the whole Hollywood thing.
The first thing you should know about me is when I was three years old my mother left me and my father. And that was traumatic obviously for my father - he suffered a nervous breakdown at that time in his life.
This site uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience. More info...
Got it!