heiots
Community Member
- MBTI
- INFJ
- Enneagram
- Type 4
Here's to another typing thread.
Would anyone like to try typing Lee Pace?
These below are apparently some of his quotes:
And a few of his interviews where you can observe him:
I have my thoughts, but I may be biased.
These below are apparently some of his quotes:
-“I dream about having a house by the water and not doing anything, not feeling ambitious, nor having the need to make money.”
-On keeping his life private: “Who cares about people’s personal lives? How are you then able to disappear into a role? Trust me, if I had something interesting to say about myself, I would.”
-“I can be very detached and shy. That’s one of the reasons I love L.A. ‘cause it’s so easy to kind of hole yourself up in your house and you don’t have to see anyone. It’s great!”
“I find that the best way into things is to open my heart up to it and allow it to be as truthful and honest as I can be, and I can make it. It’s hard to do that; it’s hard to open yourself up to something.”
-“I was that ‘awkward-didn’t-understand-his body-kind of-uncomfortable teen'."
-"I don't like confrontation."
-“I never get to wear a suit in my life, much less a tuxedo. It's kind of really fun to get to dress up, because you take yourself a little more seriously if you dress nice in a starched shirt.”
-“I’m a pretty gentle person so I don’t really have much of a thing of being a badass.”
-“I'd forgotten it's an important thing to give thought to your morality and how you intend to live your life.”
PARSONS: Did you have any reservations or fear leaving to go to New York to go to Julliard?
PACE: No. They were such great opportunities. A new experience and fascinating people. I felt like I belonged for the first time—I found my people. I was a big reader all through high school and would relate to the people I read [about] in books and the authors that I was excited about. And then suddenly I found that community of people among real people. [laughs] People who I could have a conversation with. That's one of my favorite things about doing this—you just meet the most fascinating people. You meet people who are interested in humanity. And the really good ones—the really good actors, the really good directors and writers—it's beyond the plays and beyond the movie. It's more about life and the way people think, the way people fall in love, the way they cope with the tragedy of death and knowing that they're going to die.
RE: Halt and Catch Fire
"PACE: It's about this American identity of the hunger for success and ambition and failure. We live in this culture where everyone's just trying to get it right all the time: You're trying to get right with God, you're trying to be the right person, you're trying to do this right, that right. And no one ever will. I really applaud the writers for writing these characters who are in the thick of trying to weed through the competition of their ambition versus their heart and their fallibility and their inadequacies and mediocrity and their desire to be more than they are. It's the greys on this show that I find most interesting. You find yourself trying to categorize things—it's this; it's that—but it's not that. It's a grey thing that we all live through with the passage of time and our faulty record of memory."
And a few of his interviews where you can observe him:
I have my thoughts, but I may be biased.