A Quote by Oscar Isaac

I've never been interested in celebrity. — © Oscar Isaac
I've never been interested in celebrity.
I'm definitely someone that's private. I've never been interested in celebrity.
I'm not really interested in the celebrity themselves. I'm interested in the perception of the celebrity.
I don't know why, but for whatever reason, that side of life - the celebrity and the spectacle - has never interested me.
I've never seen myself as a celebrity, but I see it in a positive way, the fact that people are still interested in most parts of my life.
I don't want Jeremy Clarkson anywhere near my shed or my toolbox or my piano. He's interested in fashionable restaurants and celebrity gossip - I'm not interested in those.
There are a lot of celebrities that I think can get a little bit distracted by the way that our society views celebrity. All of a sudden, the film becomes about, "Come see this celebrity!" I'm not interested in that. I want to see a story.
I've never been interested in things that sparkle and shine; I'm more interested in people.
I've never been interested in things that sparkle and shine, I'm more interested in people.
I've never been interested in action movies. Definitely not interested in sci-fi.
I think Hollywood has always, you know, there's always been glamour associated to it. And especially in the last ten years there has been a growing sort of obsession with celebrity life and celebrity culture.
I do feel like a fraud a lot of the time because I've never been interested in people who say 'I'm a writer', 'I'm an artist'. Too much is made of the role and not enough of the work. We are such a celebrity-driven age and a status-driven age, that the status becomes more important than the actual work.
It's part of the celebrity process but my life has never been as interesting or as wild as what's been printed about me.
Celebrity is something I've never been into, and never will be.
Maybe I've been a small part of the democratisation of celebrity, because I've been fascinated by it, and when it started to happen to me to the very limited extent that it happens to writers in North America, I was exposed to people who had the disease of celebrity. People who had raging, raging, life-threatening celebrity, people who would be in danger if they were left alone on the street without their minders. It's a great anthropological privilege to be there.
This celebrity thing has been interesting. It's hard to get used to, because I don't see myself as a celebrity.
You know, I never really thought of myself as a 'celebrity.' One of the titles that I like least is 'celebrity chef.'
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