Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
Caricature is rough truth.
The press creates a caricature.
I'm just a real person, not a caricature.
Every uneducated person is a caricature of himself.
I think a caricature is different than a character.
I didn't want to make a caricature version of Elektra.
I feel like R&B as a genre has become a caricature of itself.
Imitation is a caricature. Any imitation. Find out for yourself.
When I draw my caricature self-portrait, I always do a huge smile.
A caricature is putting the face of a joke on the body of a truth.
It is very true that D.C. often operates in the land of caricature.
I am a caricature of what British science is about in the way I work.
The best portraits are those in which there is a slight mixture of caricature.
I don't dress up as a woman: I dress up as a caricature of a caricature of a woman.
I'm not going to become a costume version or caricature of myself; I like to morph.
My public caricature - that of a self-confident alpha male - is only partly accurate.
What's natural is beautiful, and when you're not you anymore, you become a caricature.
For me, animation is the caricature of life. It's something that we create, from the ground up.
TV is a deformed vision, an excessive caricature. A chef has to stay an artisan, not become a star.
Before, gay portrayals in the media were so limiting, like a caricature of a homo. A parody almost.
You get to be a certain age - I am 58 - and it becomes tricky not to become a caricature of yourself.
You can parody and make fun of almost anything, but that does not turn the universe into a caricature.
Women are more difficult to caricature than men - partly because beauty is more difficult to caricature.
I can't look at John Prescott without thinking of Les Dawson, and Robin Cook is a caricature of himself.
A lot of queer characters get painted with either a caricature brush, or they're used to teach, in a way.
I do think there is a great deal of caricature around the House of Commons. It is just that kind of place.
When writing a novel a writer should create living people; people not characters. A character is a caricature.
My dream when I was 14 was someday I could have a David Levine caricature of me in 'The New York Review of Books.'
There are lots of people who believe that caricature of me the tabloids created, so they think they don't like me.
I am an extremely private person. I always feel that I come across as a caricature of myself whenever I do interviews.
Perhaps the reason Trump voters are so frequently the subject of caricature is that they so frequently conform to type.
If the KKK was smart enough, they would've created gangsta rap because it's such a caricature of black culture and black masculinity.
The world is a perpetual caricature of itself; at every moment it is the mockery and the contradiction of what it is pretending to be.
Hip-hop is so much about character and caricature that people just see you as a character. Very rarely are you flesh and bone to people.
It turns out that the Republican Party is not a hero to anyone but the racist, xenophobic caricature of a candidate that is Donald Trump.
No actor can play a villain if they don't sympathise with him or her - otherwise the character just becomes a two-dimensional caricature.
I keep trying to understand the phenomenon of why adults are so literal when children are so imaginative. Toys are a caricature of reality.
I have never fully exorcised shames that struck me to the heart as a child except through written violence, shadowy caricature, and dark jokes.
If you're white working class, it's very easy to caricature the elites, and if you're elite, it's very easy to caricature the white working class.
I like books that expose me to people unlike me and books that do battle against caricature or simplification. That, to me, is the heroic in fiction.
Most games end up with quite caricature scripts because they are just here to serve the game-play mechanics but not to trigger any emotional response.
The caricature of me in 1986 was not correct. I do not harbor the kind of animosity and race-based discrimination ideas that I was accused of. I did not.
For too long, opponents of the PATRIOT Act have transformed this law into a grossly distorted caricature that bears no relation to the legislation itself.
I was pretending to be a fake, a caricature, which is something I'm not, and I was doing it out of desperation and scarcity so I could provide for my family.
The caricature of Islam as a violent and intolerant religion is horrendously incomplete. Remember that those standing up to Muslim fanatics are mostly Muslims.
I just feel as though it's become a situation where people have manifested this caricature of who I am, and they act as if there's no real person inside of it.
When we have been badly injured and clearly wronged, we make an instant caricature of the person who did it to us. We define him totally by the one wrong he did.
Yes, I am aware that I have become a caricature. I've thought about this. Conceptually, what I'd like to do is the equivalent of writing myself out of the script.
As a CEO, I had significant exposure to private equity, enough that I had in no way bought into the media's caricature: rapacious privateers who destroy companies.
I've always looked upon the Ducks as caricature human beings. Perhaps I've been years writing in that middle world that J.R.R. Tolkien describes, and never knew it.