I am not a daydreamer.

I am a bit of a daydreamer.

If you're not a daydreamer, you haven't got any imagination.

I was a daydreamer. Teachers kept telling me to pay attention.

My brain is just so busy. I'm inattentive; I'm a daydreamer: the space cadet kind.

I went to high school in the 1970s and was a real daydreamer and not the best student.

I was a real daydreamer at school, gazing out of the window and losing myself in imaginary worlds.

I was a daydreamer, and there is a lot of history and geography and science I missed out on because I was in my head. And I regret that.

J. K. Rowling has said that she was bullied in school. She was a daydreamer and had her nose in books all the time, much like some of her characters today.

I've always been a daydreamer. When the other kids were playing, I was listening to the roar at Yankee Stadium - I was always attracted to the roar of the crowd.

It's the relationship I have with the world: always trying to escape from reality. I'm a daydreamer; I don't feel in harmony with my epoch or the societies I live in.

I had a small-town life - I worked at the local McDonald's for three years. I'm not sure why they kept me: I am something of a daydreamer and a dawdler, so they would only let me be the 'friendly voice' that greeted you when you entered the restaurant.

I'm a massive daydreamer. I'm constantly lost within my own fantasies and my own thoughts personally, and I think maybe that is sort of represented in what we do for a living, the fact that we make believe everything and we escape into these other characters for a living.

Maybe directors who are more interested in realism and naturalism come from cities, where they see things on their doorstep every day. But growing up as a kid in a very pretty but ever-so-slightly boring town, where not a great deal happened, encouraged me to be more escapist, more imaginative, and more of a daydreamer.

Share This Page