Terence Stamp Famous Quotes & Sayings
31 Terence Stamp Famous Sayings, Quotes and Quotation.
Peter Ustinov was the first really positive influence in my career. He was real and he bore witness to it. The things he said to you, he lived them.

From the very first movie I ever made to the current time, there have been times between action and cut when I've sensed some kind of new dimension that I haven't been familiar with before.

A lot of young directors, they're not confident; they're not open to the emotional level of the scene.

The very first film I ever saw was during the war. My mother took me, I must have been about 4, and that was Beau Geste, with Gary Cooper.

Vancouver is the most wonderful place. I put it up there with San Francisco and Sydney as a kind of magic sort of harbor city.

With Fellini, the fear dropped out of my work because it was such a happy experience ... hanging out with Fellini, having pasta on the set with Fellini, and going out with Fellini!

As a boy I believed I could make myself invisible. I'm not sure that I ever could, but I certainly had the ability to pass unnoticed.

I've been doing Tai Chi on and off for 20 years. The fundamentals of all martial arts are the same.

In the case of Elektra I really wasn't sure I could pull it off. There were so many intellectual leaps. My character, Stick, is blind, but he can see better than most people. So I had trouble kind of finding the logic.

A lot of people only see me as villains.

In my youth I dreamed of being an illustrator.

Although you have some films that are a real bummer, there's always a film that comes up where it's just heaven.

My favorite film is Gene Tierney and Tyrone Power in The Razor's Edge.

I have always had this energy, which I think of as overdrive.

I work primarily for the camera-it's not something I really talk about a lot, but it's part of the way I am as a movie actor. The camera is my girl, as it were.

It wasn't until I saw James Dean that I began to think that maybe I could actually do this. Movies didn't have to be just this fantasy with this impossibly handsome guy.

My star was kind of fading towards the end of the '60s and suddenly I got this call from Fellini, who just appeared to kind of love me!

What I wanted more than anything was a long career.

I've never wanted to become a politician, an interior decorator, I've never wanted to speculate and make a load of money. I just wanted this.

I have to be stretched in some way. There's not enough things that come my way that I fancy.

He's Soderbergh, we're working for him. It doesn't matter what he's doing; we'll see it at the premiere.

I was very disappointed that so much of the work I did on The Haunted Mansion didn't arrive in the final cut.

When I tested for Billy Budd, I had that kind of confidence that comes with the certainty that you're not going to get something. I was very rough around the edges.

It's such a performance to bring stuff into America. It's a great luxury when I am in England.
