Words matter. These are the best Juan Pablo Di Pace Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I arrived in Los Angeles on the Monday, had a call from my agent to say they wanted to see me for ‘Dallas,’ made an audition tape at my friend’s house in L.A. the same day, and had the job the following Monday.
I struggled in London for a very long time. ‘Be prepared to struggle a lot’ – it’s a European mentality. The American mentality is positive and ‘You can do it’ and ‘Everything’s possible.’ In Europe it’s an older, more realistic way of thinking. You feel like you’re having to prove that you can do it.
I’m like the black sheep of my family.
I got the call to play Tony Manero in ‘Saturday Night Fever’ in Madrid, a role I’d always wanted, as it’s such a well-constructed show, and my background is in musical theatre. I’d been travelling back and forth between London and Spain for auditions and had been borrowing money from friends to do it.
I never lost my dreams in my 20s, and I know that sounds corny, but it’s incredibly important to never let go of what you really want in your life.
Everyone thinks they know Jesus because they’ve got a personal relationship with him.
The stage is that immediate rush of energy you get from the audience. Also, doing something in chronology – something that starts and finishes the same night. In television, you work toward the one scene, you shoot it, and then you have to forget about it because you have to worry about the next scene.
I remember watching Robert Powell many years ago. He did ‘Jesus of Nazareth,’ and I remember thinking that was probably my favorite. Once I got the role, I didn’t want to watch anything, because it only influences what you do.
Every time I stepped onto the stage as Jesus, it felt like someone was pouring some honey into my body. It was amazing, an amazing feeling. And then when I had to let go of it, it was hard.
I think everything’s fair in art and how you perceive a character.
For ‘A.D.,’ when I got the script, I was really moved, because even though it told a story that I knew all my life, it was told in a different way. It was told from a very personal point of view.
There’s a lot of actors that I admire because they can just switch one second into the character. Then, they go back to jokes, and then they’re doing something really dramatic. I can’t do that. I have to really focus.
The beginning of my acting career was in London, England.
I have five, six, seven things I do before those lines are in my brain. I say them like I’m a robot; I sing them. I put a pencil in my mouth, and I say them. I cook. I play with a cushion and say them – so they really are inside of me.