Words matter. These are the best Ethan Slater Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I was a wrestler in high school, and that was a pretty big part of my life.
In my senior year of high school, I was doing a dance with a bunch of friends for the talent show, and my pants split entirely in half. It was incredible.
The sort of stereotypical wrestling practice is that you’re doing burpees, and the coach is yelling at you to keep going, and you feel like you’re going to collapse, but you somehow make it through to the end.
There’s a social element of me that’s pretty reserved. High school was when I was starting to come out of my shell because of the theater community.
It’s inherently a part of my childhood and my development as a person and an artist, this childlike feeling knowing that something is missing but not quite knowing how to fix it. I’m always drawing on it.
SpongeBob has these qualities that I aspire to. Sure, he’s a little naive, maybe, but he’s so optimistic and is able to put his love of his friends and family above everything else.
To be honest, it was a little bit of a surprise to me that my Broadway debut was a musical.
One of the things I’ve found about SpongeBob’s movement style is that, in addition to being animated and sort of stretching and squeezing, he’s really based on the classic silent comedians, physical comedians.
I’d like to think I’m optimistic and imaginative.
The more you see somebody else’s version of something, the harder it is to make it your own.
The magnitude of being able to make my Broadway debut as SpongeBob in ‘SpongeBob SquarePants’ really only started to hit me when we took it out of town.
Wrestling is a small, intimate sport.
I’ve always loved the Marx brothers and Charlie Chaplin.
SpongeBob’s voice is really pingy and forward and nasally. The problem is, if you live in the extreme of that for more than 10 minutes, it can be a little grating, and it can be hard on your voice. Also, it gets in the way of the acting to be forcing your voice into this place.
That’s what I really focused on in school – straight drama – and I would love to get an opportunity to do that.
Making my Broadway debut was, in and of itself, just a dream come true. I’ve wanted to be on Broadway forever.
I’m used to working hard and making sacrifices.
My mother passed away when I was seven. She had a piano in the house that she was teaching my sisters how to play. That was where I first encountered music, through her.
We all should be so lucky to be as optimistic as SpongeBob.
You’re always nervous about what critics say – about what anybody has to say, really.
I look a lot like my mom. I’m the only one of my siblings with red hair, and she had bright red hair. I always have felt incredibly connected to her.
I’ve gotten to meet Sara Bareilles a couple of times. I’m just a such a massive fan of hers, from her albums to ‘Waitress’ to everything that she does. To be a fan of somebody and then find out that they have a good heart and are kind is really heartwarming.
I think I’m a little less naive than SpongeBob can sometimes seem to be.
The process of finding my voice as SpongeBob was to start by watching what Tom Kenny did, trying to do an impression of sorts, and then forgetting all about it and letting the voice become a second-nature thing.
I know that my father was a little nervous about me pursuing a career in the arts.
Playing SpongeBob is freeing. There is something intrinsically about him that people identify with no matter their age.
The only reason to do a ‘SpongeBob’ on Broadway is if it’s gonna bring something new to the brand, something new to ‘SpongeBob,’ and also something innovative to theater and to Broadway.
In the room, when I’m playing SpongeBob, I’m optimistic and I’m happy, and I smile in the face of those who are upset in order to make them happier. You know, there’s this overwhelming optimism. And I’ve been lucky enough to have that become a part of my life. I like to think that it’s influenced me.
I grew up with SpongeBob – it came out in 1999, right before I turned 7. So it’s been a part of my life and all my friends’ lives and defined our humor, in a way.
I love Broadway musicals, but there’s a lot that I want to do.
Physical comedy and musical theatre were never actually in my main focus at school. I was more of a dramatic actor. I always thought I was better at that.
One of my favorite pieces of fan mail was a gift that I got. It was a jar filled with handwritten nice thoughts.
When I’m in the audience of Broadway shows, I feel like I’m in the presence of something really special with artists working at the height of their craft and doing the best work that they possibly can.
I would say that SpongeBob, at his core, is this optimistic, loving best friend. Getting to play him every day has sort of rubbed off on me and improved my life.
I start with a pretty yoga-based warm-up. I do jumping jacks and burpees, and I do a lot of dynamic stretching.