Part of me is a sexual exhibitionist.

I'm kind of an emotional exhibitionist.

I'm not a show-off; I'm not an exhibitionist.

There is no such thing as an ex-exhibitionist.

Exhibitionists have no friends, no friends at all.

I'm an exhibitionist, I was an exhibitionist as a kid.

I've done nudity. I'm an exhibitionist. It doesn't matter.

I don't think that just because you go on stage you are an exhibitionist.

I was just watching baby videos of me and I was obviously an exhibitionist.

If we had 3 million exhibitionists and only one voyeur, nobody could make any money.

I'm not an exhibitionist. But, honestly, for my art I'll do anything almost. I'll go there.

I'm not an exhibitionist in any way, shape or form. I don't even like having my picture taken!

I knew I was an exhibitionist. I came from a huge family. I found an emotional connection being on stage.

I like the experience of being in a shoot, and I'm a total exhibitionist, but I don't like to look at them.

I'm not a natural performer or exhibitionist. When I was younger, I hated the focus, and it made me feel strange.

I'm not an exhibitionist; I don't have a compulsion to share the ins and outs of my daily life with a public audience.

I was always an exhibitionist. I liked it when everyone laughed. But I didn't do plays in high school. I was too nervous.

I think I'm needed - as an artist, as an individual, as an entity, an enigma, an exhibitionist, an entertainer - as an alternative.

When you stand up acoustic in front of an audience, you really are a man without any clothes on. And that can be fun - it depends how much of an exhibitionist you are, I suppose. I quite enjoy it.

I thought I was very pretty without hair. Naked, more honest somehow. No glamor, just bald old me. I seldom wore wigs or hats. But some people must have thought I was an exhibitionist or a religious fanatic.

It was very natural for me to want to disappear into dark theater, I am really very shy. That is something that people never seem to fully grasp because, when you are an actor, you are meant to be an exhibitionist.

I loved the world of roller derby because I thought it was such an empowering metaphor, that you get out there and do it. It's such a rocker, athletic, capable, cool exhibitionist sport; it's about this great sort of camaraderie.

The truth is that to enjoy acting one must be an exhibitionist at heart, one must revel in those exposures of the emotions which would be agonizing to a shy or reserved person. All the great actors have been and are exhibitionists.

In a sense, the rumours suggesting I had quit were true: I had retired, but only from the personal-appearance end. I did that because I had always felt conspicuous onstage, and I'm not the sort of person who likes to be an exhibitionist.

I'm actually not an exhibitionist at all. When you get onstage and you get under the lights playing music, I feel more hidden and more alone than anywhere else. You hide behind your music and let your emotions come out through the music.

In high school I was the dog, always, and I never have felt comfortable or right in my body, and part of my whole exhibitionist thing has probably been a way of testing to see whether or not I really was this repulsive creature that I felt like for so long.

I think every professor and writer is in some way an exhibitionist because his or her normal activity is a theatrical one. When you give a lesson the situation is the same as writing a book. You have to capture the attention, the complicity of your audience.

Share This Page