Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I'm still too hungry for whatever comes next.
You look for comic relief in difficult times.
I guess there's always a search for happiness.
If I'm not completely daunted, I'm not interested.
As an actor, you need to be versatile. You need to challenge yourself.
Anything that is close to your heart is worthy of your time and commitment.
I've read a lot of Terry Pratchett's stuff, probably from when I was, like, 14.
I'm a big fan of live music and going to gigs, but I'll leave it to the professionals.
Everyone in London, Wales, and France made the 'Merlin' experience a very, very special one.
Merlin was very definitely supposed to be an old man guiding the young Arthur to the throne.
Any kids out there, don't base your homework on 'Merlin.' Just enjoy it and then read the books.
It's weird to be recognised anywhere. The cost of living your dream, acting, is being recognised.
I think anyone who has a passion for what they love to do, and who pursue it, is inspirational for me.
There's no social media or Googling yourself. You only have to do it once to learn never to do it again.
I think there are pros and cons to social networking, but on a social, personal level, it's just not for me.
You can't take on the qualities of a character that you'd never be cast in - and no one would ever cast you in.
I'm delighted to be joining the cast of 'The Fall' for what is going to be an exciting and gripping second series.
I'm just happy to be doing what I always wanted to do. Sometimes you have to remind yourself how privileged you are.
Merlin is the unsung hero who is often responsible for things turning out positively, but rarely gets credit for that.
You immediately hear the word 'Merlin,' you think magic, you think adventure, excitement - you also think 'an old man.'
From when I was really young one of the first things I did was to perform and do shows. It was like a natural instinct.
I never choose a genre over quality. I never think, 'I want to do that,' and sacrifice the fact it might not be very good.
Allan Cubitt has written exceptional material, and I feel very privileged to be working with him and the very talented cast.
I can't actually pinpoint anything that made me want to be an actor - I just did. And then anything after that just fueled it.
Doors that presented themselves before, which I couldn't walk through, are at least there. And there are a few keyholes I can pick.
Nowadays, kids know how a programme like Merlin is made and how it works. But the show just seems to grow in popularity the more it goes on.
Merlin was five years of my life. I enjoyed every year, every day. I had a brilliant time on it. But I'd be lying if I didn't say I wanted to do more.
Anybody who's into Arthurian legends will appreciate that they are being re-told. The Arthurian legends have been developed and re-told over the years.
'The Living And The Dead' is one of those scripts that you read and are instantly compelled and engaged by. It's intelligent, chilling, and engrossing.
So many different countries have got their version of what Merlin is: the Scottish say he Scottish, the Welsh say he's Welsh, the French say he's French.
Most of the characters I'm drawn to, as an actor, are ones that are quite intensely lonely and a bit lost and are looking for some kind of redemptive answer.
The enormous responsibility and protectiveness a man has to feel towards his family when they are threatened was a revelation to me. I have now experienced manhood.
One of the most important things is to remind yourself of where you are from and be thankful. I don't for a second take anything for granted. That's a good way to start your day.
The fans are so supportive. It's amazing when you work on something for so long and find that your fans match your passion - and in many cases exceed it. That's really gratifying.
You have to strike while the iron is hot. You have to take downtime to see friends and family, but my passion is acting: pursuing those scary, challenging characters and working with passionate people.
It doesn't have to happen for anybody at all, this acting game, so you have to count your blessings. If I am lucky that the right things have come along at the right time, I'm just going to ride that wave.
My sights have always been on acting, on the creative process, never the lifestyle. Growing up in Northern Ireland when I did, everything was against you if you wanted to do something like that. But I was determined.
If I ever saw magic on television I would say: 'I want that. That's what I want from Santa Claus'. So the cupboard in my bedroom was full of boxes of magic tricks, cups and balls, cards and foam rabbits, all sorts of stuff.
To do stories that I love, scripts that I love, and work with people who are passionate about them and passionate about projects - whether that's on stage or television or film, that's the kind of environment I want to work in.
I always look for the character that gets into your guts and tells you, 'You have to play this.' You have to be brave enough to let everything else go and let the character guide you. When I read a script, I look for that kind of pull.
I think, as a kid, whenever you say you want to be an actor, you get discouraged, so perhaps if I had have listened to those people telling me that, I might have gone down the route of a teacher. But I was never really going to do that.
From what I've read, everyone has a claim on Merlin. Was he Scottish, Welsh, English or even French? All these countries have got a big claim on him and Camelot. That's why the Arthurian legends are so popular - because they are such good stories.
The fantasy genre is so in at the moment. Viewers want to escape from their lives and watch something that is so separate from their everyday existence. People have always wanted to escape their lives - that's why they go to movies and the theatre.
Any Arthurian enthusiast who has watched 'Merlin' has probably concluded that it's not accurate whatsoever - but, it's not meant to be. It's not meant to be a true telling. It's in a fantasy setting, it's really concentrating on the fantasy element.
Hats off to Julian and Johnny, the producers, for sticking to their guns with the five-season story arc of 'Merlin'. It would have been too easy to give in to demand and stretch the show on beyond their original plan because of its incredible success.
You learn so many different skills on the show «Merlin». You're constantly asked to do green-screen, horse riding, comedy scenes, dramatic scenes, everything. The ability and the skill to adapt under a tight schedule is one that I'll definitely take away.
For me, it's all I've wanted to do. I did local plays and productions, local theater groups and anything that involved it. And then, I went and studied it, attended drama school and got my first lucky break in the theater in London, and just went from there.
I read 'The Crystal Cave' book by Mary Stewart, and I thought it was a really, really interesting part of the legend, in which Merlin could enter into the cave with these crystals and see reflections of the future in them and learn how to use that and harness those powers for himself.
I think TV is a fantastic medium right now because of what you can do visually. It's phenomenal, and it's just getting better and better, but in a way, there's no beating the personal image you can create in your head, with those personal aspects, which you can only get from reading or radio dramas.
When I think of Camelot, I think of the castle in France where we film, but I think it's wrong to lock it down to one place because it's all part of our imagination. They are legends for a reason. Their stories have endured for hundreds of years and, hopefully, they will for hundreds of years to come.