A Quote by Will Forte

I'm not very good at impersonations. — © Will Forte
I'm not very good at impersonations.

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I love how much people are drawn to my 'impersonations' of Trump because they aren't really impersonations at all. I'm not trying to be Trump so much as I'm trying to make Trump me. In doing them, I simply ask myself, 'How would I, Sarah Cooper, say these words?'
It's weird that I've ended up playing so many real live people, because I was never any good at impersonations at school.
I don't do impersonations. I can do a wounded elephant! I can do a really good cow! And because of the amount of time I spent in North Yorkshire, I do a variety of sheep. All of which I will be happy to roll out for you!
I really don't do celebrity impersonations at all.
I love doing impersonations of people.
There are people who do De Niro and Walken impersonations.
The truth of the matter is, all of those guys on Star Trek: The Next Generation actually want to be me. These impersonations they do are just some way of trying to feel what it must be like to be me. And I understand that! Because it feels really good to be Patrick Stewart!
I used to do impersonations: Harry Butler in the wild, or I'd do Gough Whitlam.
I was a natural drama queen when I was younger. I was always doing impersonations and showing off.
It's funny; recently I've started to notice people's impersonations of me, and it's basically like a hyperactive child.
The one thing I could do was voices and impersonations and weird characters, and there was really no call for that, except on Saturday Night Live.
First I was a mimic. Practically from the moment I began talking, I did impersonations of the people in my neighborhood - the storekeepers, the policemen, my teachers.
I used to do a show in New York that was loosely based around celebrity impersonations. I know what it takes to embody someone.
My last vestige of 'hands off religion' respect disappeared in the smoke and choking dust of September 11, 2001, followed by the 'National Day of Prayer,' when prelates and pastors did their tremulous Martin Luther King impersonations and urged people of mutually incompatible faiths to hold hands, united in homage to the very force that caused the problem in the first place.
At castings for commercials, you end up being told to do ridiculous things, such as animal impersonations. You probably get one commercial for 20 utter humiliations.
Hassan N'Dam is a very good fighter, he's very experienced and been around a long time. He's got good footwork, very good movement.
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