A Quote by Chris Pratt

As long as I keep getting cast, I don't care if it's typecast. — © Chris Pratt
As long as I keep getting cast, I don't care if it's typecast.
I am conscious about not getting typecast, but obviously I have to keep picking up great roles so that I don't get typecast.
I don't mind getting typecast as long as it is not overpowering me as an actor.
I don’t care if I get one at all. Just as long as I keep getting anniversaries.
It is important to keep the filmmakers interested in you so they can offer you everything and anything. We actors are not given work on the basis of audience poll; the filmmaker will cast you after they see and like your work. It is essential to do different kind of films and not get typecast.
As long as I can keep remembering the lines and getting to the locations, I want to keep working as long as I can. I love it.
I love when I am not typecast. I've been acting for 50 years. I was such a baby face; I was playing children until I was in my 30s, which frustrated me enormously. Now that I am 65 and getting to play women in their 50s, I am getting paid back for having to play children for so long.
I've said maybe too many times that I'd rather be typecast than not cast at all.
It can be difficult to get cast as something that is off-center from you, and my biggest fear is to be typecast.
I keep getting cast as this bad guy, and I don't know why.
A newcomer needs to be careful as to what kind of role they choose. If you choose something different, you will end up getting typecast. That's why I chose to play a character my age, to keep my options open for the future.
I was certainly typecast for a while on television because I was always being cast as the compassionate mother or whatever.
I was certainly typecast for a while on television because I was always being cast as the 'compassionate mother' or whatever.
You know, I keep getting cast as douchebags. I might speak to my therapist about that.
We know that babies develop as well in nonmaternal as in maternal care, as long as the care is of good quality. The issue is not who gives the care but the quality of that care,... The guilt trip is, in my view, a hangover of another era and of unacknowledged tactics to keep women in their proper place--at home full-time.
Every drama requires a cast. The cast may be so huge, as in Leo Tolstoy's 'Anna Karenina,' that the author or editor provides a list of characters to keep them straight. Or it may be an intimate cast of two.
People ask me if I'm afraid of getting typecast, but you can't be afraid of that. It's really not up to you. I'm getting other parts that aren't vampires.
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