A Quote by Abhishek Banerjee

When you are a talkative and expressive person in real life, it definitely gets difficult to play someone who is so silent. — © Abhishek Banerjee
When you are a talkative and expressive person in real life, it definitely gets difficult to play someone who is so silent.
Many of the characters I play are talkative - 'Oopiri' for instance - so the dubbing process gets longer.
It's very difficult to hand someone your whole life story to play, and you've never really met that person.
As an actor, you can't play a flashback; you can't play someone's memory. You just have to play each circumstance as if it was real and understand that person's point of view.
I was brought up not to be selfish or self-centered. So if you play somebody who isn't so lovable, you can play that person and no one will turn on you. I don't want to play that person in real life. Because then people won't like me so much.
If you write a story based on a real person, you're trapped by the details of the real person and his life. It gets in the way of writing your own story.
A real life, a life that leaves a deposit in the shape of something alive.... It's difficult to say what makes a life a real life.... You could also say it depends on a person being identical with himself.
I am bubbly and talkative in real life.
I'm just a shy and retreating kind of person. Sometimes I get in a real talkative mood - but not very often.
Fights in real life between real people only last so long before someone gets seriously hurt.
There's something about seeing someone who has actually no real supernatural powers and only being able to throw things with precision that kind of makes people be like, 'Oh, I can see that. I can put that person in real life, and I can see it play out as a human being.'
In every culture, in every language, there is expressive play, expressive word play; there's language use to different purposes that we would call poetry.
I'd always heard stories about how Harpo Marx was the most talkative of the Marx brothers. I found it interesting that someone you never got to hear speak in films would never not speak in real life.
At the heart of any drama, there's conflict. When you are acting, you get to play out the confrontations you want to have in real life but can't. Or the emotions that you would want to have in real life, but sometimes they are too difficult.
My loneliness was born when men praised my talkative faults and blamed my silent virtues.
People need to stand up, women need to stand up for each other and say, "No you can't kick this person like they're a dog. You can disagree with someone politically, you can have arguments, definitely privilege needs to be discussed in real productive and valid ways. But it's not real criticism if it's just like, "you're a disgusting bad person."
I'm not confident in social situations; just going up to someone in a bar and saying 'Hi' is going to be even more difficult because they won't know the real me. They will just know me as a fictional person I play on the screen.
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