A Quote by Nick Nolte

Acting is always therapeutic. — © Nick Nolte
Acting is always therapeutic.
Acting is therapeutic. I say I'm not shy, but... Acting is a very vulnerable experience, and you've got to be really confident to put yourself out there to be judged.
Acting is really therapeutic for me, personally. That's something that I'll always remember. I don't know how it's going to look, but I gave it my heart and soul.
Acting is therapeutic.
Acting's not therapy, but it can be therapeutic.
I think acting is therapeutic for me.
Acting for me is very therapeutic. It's my shrink.
Acting, for me, was therapeutic. It was a way of expressing yourself.
Boxing isn't a career. Acting is it for me. But they're both very therapeutic.
Yeah, to me, acting is very therapeutic. I get out a lot of anger and frustration.
Not just as an actress, but on a human-being level, I've experienced frustration on many different levels. [With my] career, it would be more the frustration of not always finding challenging material or inspiring material ... [Acting is] therapeutic for me. I'm pretty accommodating.
I think, in general, I find writing to be very therapeutic and singing in itself to be really therapeutic.
The acting served as an outlet for my emotions for some time because I was doing it under the guise of someone else. And that can only be therapeutic up to a point until you truly deal with it and can express it to someone directly. Acting was a helpful outlet for me as a child. In some ways, I can say it saved my life.
Some people have therapy, some people are alcoholics or they're in AA. Some people jump out of planes on weekends or find ways to release this kind of thing. And for me, it's acting. I find acting very therapeutic for whatever it is.
You are relying on a waiting on other people in acting and films, so to be able to have something that I have full creative control over is really very therapeutic.
Acting's not particularly complicated. But the great thing is you can step into somebody else's shoes without dealing with the consequences. It's very therapeutic in that way.
I've played a lot of bad guys, and I'm pretty good at leaving my work at the office. And I look at acting as having a certain sort of therapeutic nature to it.
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