Top 35 Quotes & Sayings by Simon Callow

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English actor Simon Callow.
Last updated on November 21, 2024.
Simon Callow

Simon Phillip Hugh Callow is an English actor, director, and writer. He is internationally known for his roles in films like Amadeus, A Room with a View, Four Weddings and a Funeral and Shakespeare in Love.

Bleak House is just the most astounding piece of work. There's huge, visionary poetry in it.
I love storytelling and I love just relating directly to an audience. That's why we do theatre, it's because we love contact with the audience. We love the fact that the audience will change us. The way the audience responds makes us change our performance.
I actually wanted to be a writer long before I wanted to be an actor. — © Simon Callow
I actually wanted to be a writer long before I wanted to be an actor.
I would say critically of myself that I am somebody without secrets. Sometimes acting depends on you having a secret. I don't think I've ever had that.
I am never bored, never short of anything to do and I don't even ever feel lonely. I am quite gregarious and I get out and about a lot, but sometimes it is just wonderful to be on your own.
He always describes his characters' voices and their physique so brilliantly. As people have said, they are cartoons, caricatures. They're grotesques really.
My mother wanted me to be a teacher. She had this vision of me walking across the quadrangle in an Oxford college wearing my academic gown.
I don't practise any religion but I am deeply interested in the answers that mankind has come up with to explain the human situation.
Very often my weekends are spent performing on Saturday, on stage in the afternoon and again in the evening.
Jesus is absolutely at the centre of Western civilisation and part of my fascination with him is, why? What is it about this particular man and his story?
I hated Sundays when I was growing up in Streatham, south London. Everything closed down and stopped.
I went to Queen's University Belfast and stayed nine months, then I ran away to be an actor.
The elderly are all someone's flesh and blood and we cannot just shut them in a cupboard and hand over the responsibility for taking care of them to the state.
I'd like to direct more operas.
He invented this idea of telling the life story of a great writer through becoming his characters and becoming him. It was such a pleasure and I thought we must find another writer.
There is something essentially sanguine about me, which I am inclined to attribute to the fact that I was born by caesarean section. It must affect you.
Many actors have protested about mobile phones going off in theatres, but the real menace now is people texting during a show. It may only disturb a few people around them, but for me, as an actor, when I spot them answering their emails, I am outraged.
Shakespeare speaks for the human heart but Dickens speaks for the social man and for injustices.
When the BBC decided to bring Doctor Who back as a feature film a few years ago, one national newspaper ran a poll to ask its readers who should be the new Doctor, and I topped it.
He spent hours and hours and hours practising these conjuring tricks. It's just such a curious thing.
To live another person's life is quite a weird thing.
Everything that we have gone through, are going through, and will go through is there in Shakespeare. It is all of human life.
Shakespeare wrote all there is that we need to know about dementia in 'King Lear.'
I've come to this conclusion: What makes a great actor is great need. A huge need of acting.
I get sent a lot of scripts which feature him as a kind of all-purpose Victorian literary character and really understand little, if anything, about him, his life or his books.
When children have grieving parents it's also common for them to feel an obligation to cheer them up and make them happy. — © Simon Callow
When children have grieving parents it's also common for them to feel an obligation to cheer them up and make them happy.
I don't have any big regrets.
Childhood didn't have a big influence on me, really - in fact I spent most of it plotting how to escape.
Increasingly I've come to think that what's at the core of acting is thinking. Most people would say it's feeling.
Artists probably should have some impenetrable aspects of themselves.
You could say Shakespeare is so extraordinary precisely because he was so ordinary. He had all the usual anxieties and understandings of what it is to have children, lose children, get married, struggle to make a living and so on.
Like many Catholics, I was very affected by the personality of Jesus and that impression, pious as it was, has stayed with me.
Having caught a glimpse of what I might be able to do with my talent, I feel a tremendous obligation to try to fulfill it.
Shakespeare wrote all there is that we need to know about dementia in 'King Lear.
To enter a theatre for a performance is to be inducted into a magical space, to be ushered into the sacred arena of the imagination.
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