Words matter. These are the best Cody Fern Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I love Robin Wright so much. She’s one of my favorite actresses; she’s incredibly powerful.
I went to uni, and I studied commerce on a scholarship, and that was crazy and wild in and of itself.
I’ve tried to shut myself off as much as possible from the hype of ‘War Horse,’ and just thought, ‘OK, I’m going to focus on the character and focus on the story and focus on what I have to do.’
I don’t know how to play a character unless I love him.
‘House of Cards’ I’ve watched since the first day.
When I read the script for ‘War Horse,’ I was in absolute tatters.
One of my favorite films is ‘Let the Right One In.’
When I was at uni, I got good grades and went on to do honours, but I kept thinking, ‘I shouldn’t be here.’ Something just didn’t feel right. When I finished, I decided that every decision I make from this day forward will be purely based on intuition, and I’m not going to fight that.
I would want to do a role like the one Ezra Miller had in ‘We Need To Talk About Kevin.’ That is a real juicy role.
With ‘Horror Story’, it really was, ‘You’re going to run; you’re going to jump off this cliff, and trust that that Ryan Murphy is going to catch you.’ So I just ran head-on into it and jumped off the edge of that cliff.
I’m far more drawn to performances by strong women than I am to men.
I’m not a religious person, but I read the Bible many years ago.
I told my agent that I wouldn’t do TV unless it was Ryan Murphy, ‘House of Cards,’ or HBO.
I grew up in a very small country town, so I was exposed to horses at quite a young age, but I used to cry and run; they seemed so powerful and so unpredictable.
I just think that women make better actors; I just do. I think it’s undeniable.
With ‘Versace,’ after I had gotten the , it was two weeks of preparation before I started filming, and I had read Maureen Orth’s book; I had been able to get a hold of photos and really start to inhabit the mind of David Madson.
I remember watching Cate Blanchett in ‘Elizabeth’ and feeling like for the first time – even though that time period wasn’t happening now – that I believed that role.
I grew up watching Kathy Bates, and ‘Misery’ is one of my favorite films.
I find the whole idea of religion overwhelming and frightening and not for me.
I’ve known since I was about six that I wanted to be an actor, but I grew up in a very small country town, and it was just not something that was possible.
If people hate Michael Langdon, that’s a good thing. I’m not going to debate that. I don’t worry about making him likeable… My real focus in playing Langdon is making his intentions clear and how he operates and what his mission is and how he shapes the perception of who he is around people.
I can say that working with Jessica Lange has been one of the most incredible joys of my life.
I don’t have a Twitter, so I don’t know what’s happening in that world.
After ‘Versace’ and ‘American Horror Story,’ if that was the end of the line, then I can go happy.
I think nerves are part and parcel of working as an actor. You can either work against them or you can embrace them, and I very much embrace them.
I have never had more fun in my life playing a character than I’ve had playing Michael Langdon. He’s so delicious. He’s so layered and complicated.
It’s one thing to be supported in your career and another thing for your peers to embrace you and say, ‘We believe in you.’
For me, I can’t play a metaphor or a symbol.
Good acting is good acting, whether it’s on stage, on TV, or in films.
People don’t think of themselves as evil.
‘Atlas Shrugged’ shows when you have a singular vision of something and how quickly you can become attune to that vision and devalue others quickly based on their principles and ideologies.
I’m a very positive person in my life. I’m very optimistic.
I really don’t want to offend anybody, but I find all forms of religious fundamentalism frightening.
There are people in positions of power that are righteous about what they believe: they’re enacting out evil principles, but they don’t believe that that’s what they’re doing.
The thing about working on a Ryan Murphy TV show is that he has such an extraordinary collective of artists, so everyone is really like a family.