Top 40 Natasha Rothwell Quotes

Words matter. These are the best Natasha Rothwell Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.

I definitely was inspired by drama teachers in high sch

I definitely was inspired by drama teachers in high school named Mr. Walsh and Ms. O’Neil, and both of them were very formative in helping me sort of understand theater. But I think my biggest inspiration is that I was a high school drama teacher in real life for four years in the Bronx.
Natasha Rothwell
One of the things I pride myself on is that my fan base is progressive, but I don’t shy away from people who think differently from me. I welcome productive conversations, but it’s important for me to not hide where I stand.
Natasha Rothwell
I was obsessed with Carol Burnett, Lily Tomlin; I watched ‘Mama’s Family’ religiously.
Natasha Rothwell
What I loved about playing Ms. Albright in ‘Love, Simon’ is that, so often, when we speak of allies in the queer community, we don’t really get to see what it means be an active ally. I love that she can step into this world with these kids and be a truth teller.
Natasha Rothwell
I loved women who weren’t afraid to get ugly in their comedy.
Natasha Rothwell
I’m drawn to subversive material and material that speaks to communities and people who tend to be marginalized, and telling those stories in ways that subvert expectations. That’s always been fun for me to play and always been fun for me to write.
Natasha Rothwell
My social media is riddled with me speaking out on stuff that matters because silence is a petri dish for hate. For me, it’s important to speak out.
Natasha Rothwell
‘Love, Simon’ is incredibly dope, but that’s one specific experience, and I would love to see more versions of that story being told or other stories that we haven’t even seen yet from the LGBTQIA community.
Natasha Rothwell
I feel like theater in high school seems to be sort of like the safe haven for the outsiders and people who don’t necessarily fit in. And it was a come-as-you-are sort of class, and it’s a come-as-you-are after-school activity.
Natasha Rothwell
It was really important to me to explore how disparate people are connected.
Natasha Rothwell
I’m not going to run or be silent for fear of keeping a fan base.
Natasha Rothwell
I think it’s important to make art for a myriad of reasons. The least of which is that I think laughter is medicinal, and I think there is an escapism aspect – an act of self-care.
Natasha Rothwell
I was constantly trying to make my family laugh and my parents laugh. It’s just something that always felt natural to me. And then I learned how to use my powers for good in high school.
Natasha Rothwell
As far as the adjectives that I lead with, I think a writer and a comedienne are first. I have never qualified my experience or gender or my race, although I know that’s a huge component on how that is used. But I think in order for me to do my job effectively, I have to really be the best at what it is I’m doing.
Natasha Rothwell
I think a caricature is different than a character.
Natasha Rothwell
I would just take dolls around the house – there’s old VHS footage from my dad, who was an early adapter and had this RCA camera – and it’s me taking a Michael Jackson Barbie doll and putting on a show with that.
Natasha Rothwell
One of the biggest things I learned was not to tell myself ‘no’ before someone else. As someone who’s creative, I know the inner critic can be really loud. Early on in my career, I would just listen to it and tell myself ‘no.’
Natasha Rothwell
When you’re a writer, there is a selflessness that has to happen; you have to have equity with how you treat each of the characters and the information you bring into the room.
Natasha Rothwell
I knew I always wanted to major in theater.
Natasha Rothwell
Luckily, with ‘Insecure,’ we have really great writers who get it and work hard to give Kelli layers for me to explore as an artist.
Natasha Rothwell
As a writer, I use improv to write. Exploring characters and stories through improv and sitting at the computer and thinking about what this character would say or do helps me creatively.
Natasha Rothwell
In a world where you graduate with a theater degree from college, you gotta find your bread job. You gotta find that job to pay the bills.
Natasha Rothwell
I don’t know if there is an expiration date on diversity.
Natasha Rothwell
I think once I began to trust myself as a writer, I began to be seen as a writer.
Natasha Rothwell
My feet are firmly planted in my political ideology. To me, it’s being authentic in every area, and that includes politics.
Natasha Rothwell
I remember writing monologues and one-act plays and stuff in high school. I had a project in English that was just a short book of limericks. It was so weird. I enjoyed the challenge and rhyme of it. I was always putting on plays and stuff.
Natasha Rothwell
Black women have earned the right to be basic.
Natasha Rothwell
Improv is such a huge part of my background, and a huge part of character discovery is really being inside the character and trying to think through them without the limitations of the script.
Natasha Rothwell
Teaching theater, I felt very lucky. In a world where there’s few options for someone who graduates with a theater degree, trying to figure out how to make rent and pay the bills, I always gravitated towards teaching jobs and things like that. I wanted to stay close to my passion as well.
Natasha Rothwell
Rom-coms are my jam.
Natasha Rothwell
My bread and butter is rom-com, and if I had to go back and tell my 15-year-old self watching ‘When Harry Met Sally’ that one day I would be writing a film in the same genre, I would have freaked out.
Natasha Rothwell
When I was a teacher, I definitely noticed bullying hap

When I was a teacher, I definitely noticed bullying happening, and I noticed people choosing to be quiet when they should speak up. And so for me, as a teacher, it wasn’t just about advocating for students who were being picked on but trying to teach the bystanders how to speak up and not be afraid.
Natasha Rothwell
The thing about improv that I really love in scripted television is that it really makes a moment authentic.
Natasha Rothwell
As far as being a plus-size woman, I play a plus-size character by default, and for me, the visibility – that, I think, is key.
Natasha Rothwell
When I moved to New York, I really wanted to find my bread job as close to my passion as possible. There’s nobility in waiting tables. But I really wanted to find a job in the arts, and so I started teaching.
Natasha Rothwell
I’m a military brat, so I moved around a ton. When you’re making friends and you’re funny, it makes that easier.
Natasha Rothwell
I’m interested in stories being told by marginalized voices and, specifically, people of color.
Natasha Rothwell
I’ve always been kind of precocious, but my journey sort of solidified when I was in college and majored in theater. That’s how I knew I wanted to spend my life writing, telling, and performing stories.
Natasha Rothwell
I hope movies like ‘Love, Simon’ encourage people to be their authentic selves.
Natasha Rothwell
I think it’s so important for us to make art and to be loud and to resist with our art.
Natasha Rothwell