A Quote by Aishwarya Rajesh

It's an honour to play a woman cricketer on screen. — © Aishwarya Rajesh
It's an honour to play a woman cricketer on screen.
Playing in the same team as Sachin is a huge honour. His balance of mind, shrewd judgment, modesty and, above all, his technical brilliance make him my all-time hero. You can't get a more complete cricketer than Sachin. He has everything that a cricketer needs to have
I want to be a good cricketer, but I am a person first and a cricketer second. I won't always be a cricketer, but I will always be a person.
I would love to play Wonder Woman on the big screen.
As the sun is to the earth, so Honour is to a man. without it, he will not flourish. All else may fail you, but honour is the treasure no one can take from you, the shield no one can penetrate unless you let them. Honour is beautiful and clean. Honour is sacred.
There is this film called 'La Femme Nikita.' I want to play something like that. This woman with a gun in her hand but with tears in her eyes. I would love to play that kind of vulnerability on screen.
I've always said it's flattering to be desired, just as it's flattering that people accept the reality of the character you play. But it was always ridiculous to assume that because I could play a gigolo on screen I'd play anything like that role off screen.
I wanted to be a cricketer. But I was not skilled enough to be a national-level cricketer.
I concentrated on politics and movies because cricket was taken away from me. But the world knows Sreesanth as a cricketer, and I, too, like to be remembered as a cricketer who gave everything on the field.
I don't know if I would have made a better engineer than a cricketer. I definitely think I am a much better cricketer.
It's every cricketer's dream to play in the World Cup.
As a cricketer, everybody has a dream to play for your country.
I don't know if Rush Limbaugh knows the difference between a screen porch and a screen play.
I much prefer writing an original movie with the screen in mind to transferring a play to the screen.
Islam believes that Jesus is a prophet, and they honour him - highly - and they respect him, and they follow his teachings. So, for me, as somebody who was raised Muslim, it is an honour to actually play Jesus, just because of that.
We never give more honour to Jesus than when we honour his Mother, and we honour her simply and solely to honour him all the more perfectly. We go to her only as a way leading to the goal we seek - Jesus, her Son.
It's kind of a test when you read a novel thinking about its potential for the screen: How does it play on your mind's screen?
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