A Quote by Ice Cube

I can't really attribute my success onscreen to any formula and suggest you "do this or that" to make it as an actor. — © Ice Cube
I can't really attribute my success onscreen to any formula and suggest you "do this or that" to make it as an actor.
Women attribute their success to working hard, luck, and help from other people. Men will attribute that - whatever success they have, that same success - to their own core skills.
I completely work on the basis of my intuition. I don't think I premeditate a success formula. There is no formula to make a successful film.
I would suggest it to any actor to get some movement classes because it really, really makes a difference.
I don't have any formula for ousting a dictator or building democracy. All I can suggest is to forget about yourself and just think of your people. It's always the people who make things happen.
I don't attribute an actor's great success to their own individual performance when it's something as collaborative as a movie.
I think that my biggest attribute to any success that I have had is hard work. There really is no substitute for working hard.
I ask people to not attribute what I've done - my success and how hard I've worked - to not reduce that or attribute that to someone else.
We love Formula One and think Formula One's great. But we think Formula E is different. We would be making a big mistake if we tried to compete with Formula One and be similar to Formula One, we have to be radically different to Formula One to have a chance of survival. I don't mean survival by beating Formula One but co-existing complimentary to Formula One.
I attribute my success to this - I never gave or took any excuse.
I believe comedy is the toughest genre to bring alive onscreen, but it's something that I really enjoy doing as an actor.
I never really looked at Formula One like that was the long-term goal. I obviously dreamed, and my aspirations were to get to Formula One, but I really started thinking about it in Formula 3 at 16, 17 years old, and I saw that it was right in front of me.
Sometimes perception is almost more important than the skill level of an actor. And if you give too much away, you have nothing to take for yourself and put onscreen. If people feel like they know you too well, they won't be able to indentify with the character you're trying to portray. Or they'll feel that you're just playing yourself, and then you just become a personality actor. And that's the death of any actor.
There really isn't a formula for success.
If you haven't really raced a lot in lower categories, and you make the jump to Formula One, you have to learn in Formula One, and a lot more people are watching.
I make an attempt to do different kinds of films. There's no such formula for guaranteed success.
Every human being has a plethora of emotions. As an actor, we are lucky to take them out and portray onscreen. But in normal life you can't do that. That is the charm of leading an actor's life.
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