Top 29 Quotes & Sayings by Lindsay Duncan

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Scottish actress Lindsay Duncan.
Last updated on November 22, 2024.
Lindsay Duncan

Lindsay Vere Duncan is a Scottish actress. On stage, she has won two Olivier Awards and a Tony Award. Duncan has starred in several plays by Harold Pinter. Her best known roles on television include: Barbara Douglas in Alan Bleasdale's G.B.H. (1991), Servilia of the Junii in the HBO/BBC/RAI series Rome (2005–2007), Adelaide Brooke in the Doctor Who special "The Waters of Mars" (2009) and Lady Smallwood in the BBC series Sherlock. On film, she portrayed Anthea Lahr in Prick Up Your Ears (1987), voiced the android TC-14 in Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace (1999) and Alice's mother in Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland (2010), and played the acerbic theatre critic Tabitha Dickinson in Birdman or (2014).

I've been listening to a new band called Wolf Alice, courtesy of my son. The vocalist, Ellie Rowsell, has a gorgeous voice.
A certain amount of anger doesn't make us less empathetic, less humane, less loving. It just makes us real.
You're not cast because you're like someone or because you're sympathetic to them. You're cast because you can act. — © Lindsay Duncan
You're not cast because you're like someone or because you're sympathetic to them. You're cast because you can act.
I don't perform well in private. Socially, I mean. And I didn't as a child. Actors aren't necessarily outgoing, are they?
I desperately wanted to play the part of Darth Vader's mother - I think she ended up being played by a Scandinavian actress - because my son was completely crazy about 'Star Wars.'
I would rather give up acting than become world famous, because I think you pay a very high price. Writing and putting new plays out into the world has informed what I do, and I've had a lot more freedom to play really interesting parts.
I don't have any desire to be better known.
If someone said I had enough money and I could take six months off, I would run in an instant.
I've always been a material-based actor. That's what I've done, the choices I've made - like a heat-seeking missile.
The excitement of stepping onto a stage - there's nothing quite like it.
I have done some wonderful television, but you know, there's not as much exceptional material as there is in the theatre. So I do a lot of theatre, but really, as with most actors, I just love going from one to another. It's stimulating, it's diverting, it's a different way of life, and you know, I dearly like a good mix.
You always remember the delicacy of the work you do on a new play - the delicacy and the rigor and the courage.
I know I'll always work. In what form, it really doesn't matter.
I have the highest regard for Meryl Streep as an actress and think she's a fabulous person as well.
I suppose because I do and can work in the theatre, I don't see work as closing down as an older woman.
Recently I made the mistake of opening a bundle of reviews that someone had sent me of a production from years and years ago, and someone had written a really lovely review except that it made a remark about the way I spoke: 'A lot of people find her voice terribly irritating.' Do they? I had no idea.
My mother was always deeply attracted to anything medical, and I think she would have loved me to have been a doctor. My father was in the army for 21 years, came out just before I was born. There was no history of showbusiness on either side of the family, but they were completely supportive.
Deep down, I think I would be utterly miserable in Hollywood.
I've always had not just an affection but a real love for the theater family in New York, and I really feel it is a family. I'm so touched by the generosity of everyone there.
I'm perfectly gregarious, but I can also be really happy left to my own devices with nobody watching me or listening to me.
No matter how much we disagree with people, demonising them doesn't get us anywhere; it merely indicates a closed mind.
I do feel almost violent when I'm watching things that I don't think are good enough. I get furious for the audience. I want to say to them, 'This play is not supposed to be like this. They've got it completely wrong. You should be electrified by this.'
I want to have the career that is my choice - what interests me, what doesn't. I feel more and more strongly about that. — © Lindsay Duncan
I want to have the career that is my choice - what interests me, what doesn't. I feel more and more strongly about that.
It's an important point to make that people can't just be invalidated, eradicated, because they don't fit tidily into a box. And more and more, the modern world is all about conformity.
My parents' generation was definitely pre-telly, and they knew how to entertain each other. Everybody knew something that they could do - a song or a poem, or a piece of music. At school, I remember being a cat and then a budgie and then a bumble bee. I obviously thought all that was marvelous.
I was the suburban kid of Scottish parents, and the idea of an acting career was so beyond my experience. I didn't even know there were drama schools until a friend told me.
That kind of creaming off the pretty postcard image of the past, I think, is a road to nowhere.
My background is really being a writer's actor - that seems to be the way I work best, bringing out the best of writing. There's a whole range of acting skills, and some people can be astonishing with very poor material. That's not me; my skill is essentially unlocking the writing.
I loved 'Homeland' - it's such an intriguing, intelligent piece of television, and I am fascinated by them making a hero and heroine that are so odd, so flawed and so complicated. It is a programme that really draws you in.
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