Top 33 Quotes & Sayings by Stephen Rea

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an Irish actor Stephen Rea.
Last updated on December 22, 2024.
Stephen Rea

Stephen Rea is an Irish film and stage actor. Rea has appeared in films such as V for Vendetta, Michael Collins, Interview with the Vampire and Breakfast on Pluto. Rea was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor for Neil Jordan's thriller The Crying Game (1992). He has had important roles in the Hugo Blick TV series The Shadow Line and The Honourable Woman, for which he won a BAFTA Award. In 2020, The Irish Times, ranked Rea the 13th greatest Irish film actor of all-time.

You have to know who you are, if you don't you have nightmares.
I believe some people in this business suffer from fame because they behave in a famous fashion.
I think great art is always ambiguous and can't be pinned down. — © Stephen Rea
I think great art is always ambiguous and can't be pinned down.
I loved movies as a teenager and saw as much American cinema as I could, but I hated the English films of the early '60s and had absolutely no point of identification with them.
My kids act all the time and it's exactly what I used to do.
I'm enjoying it, but I still don't know why I'm hooked on acting.
I am afraid of death, scared by it. I already don't know whether I exist or not. So dying really terrifies me.
At least when you're acting you can be someone. In front of the camera you have to be yourself. And who am I?
When you're playing the part of a saxophone or a trumpet player, both of which I have done, it would be nice to be able to play like John Coltrane, but you can't. Your job is to do something else. And I'm not sure what it is, but I don't think I'd be acting Niels Bohr any better if I went and studied physics for five years.
Angel was the first Irish feature film. Neil's first movie and my first movie.
I have never been to a brothel. I don't think I could go into one.
I've been worked over by the English press because there's an assumption that my politics are identical with my wife's, and for that matter that my wife's politics are identical with her politics of 20 years ago.
That was the beginning of modern acting for me. You don't have to tell a camera everything. It gets bored if you do and wants to look elsewhere.
I see people with laptops as being enslaved to something they can't live without.
At this moment, when Ireland seems about to break into something new, we thought it was worth looking back at a time when people seemed to have found a way out of the sectarian division of the country.
People often refer to my career before The Crying Game as something which led up to that point. But I was very fulfilled in what I was doing.
I'd like to own a movie camera - a proper one, with film, not a digital thing. Celluloid has more character.
I didn't want to be seen as just a guy on a list. I'm interested in good scripts, scripts that are about something, scripts that move your acting along.
You do small movies because the script is good and because you believe in the director. You don't care about the money. And when they disappear, it's a pity.
The worst thing for an actor is a director that gets on your nerves and says things that actually confuse you.
The Butcher Boy is a very great novel indeed and a very important Irish novel. The ambiguity of that is, he's writing a book about an appalling situation and he does it in a hilarious way.
I never watch TV. I know I'm missing so much, aren't I? I'm probably not. I can't stand popular TV. I've got too much to do to watch it. I know that sounds pretentious and pompous, but there you are.
I've never been in a bad play. There might have been bad productions and I might have been bad in them, but I've never been in a play that wasn't interesting or worthwhile doing on some level.
People ask me to smile for the camera, but somehow it always comes out gloomy.
We didn't have a television, so I grew up with books. This isn't to suggest I'm an intellectual, but I do read a lot because part of acting is an exploration of literature.
Acting is way of making yourself exist. — © Stephen Rea
Acting is way of making yourself exist.
I don't feel ashamed of my wife's political background, and I don't think she should either. I feel that the people who administered the North of Ireland for the last 20 years should be ashamed. There you are.
If you're playing a lead, you're shaping the movie. When you're playing a supporting role, you've got only a moment to make it count.
I'm not in denial about technology, but my mother used to say when I was a kid, 'Son, you're handless,' because I couldn't fix anything. My ambition is to be a Luddite.
The End of the Affair is a good movie because it about things, things that really matter. Love, sex, death. Have you ever seen romance?
I don't know that I'm 'hangdog'. That suggests someone skulking around, unengaged. I'm not. I'm 'engaged', believe me. I have just got a slightly sad face.
My kids act all the time and its exactly what I used to do.
I loved movies as a teenager and saw as much American cinema as I could, but I hated the English films of the early 60s and had absolutely no point of identification with them.
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