Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
A performer needs and craves a live audience.
It's hard not to be affected by the live audience.
I just love engaging a live audience - I love that.
There's nothing like performing for a live audience.
There is no buzz like performing for a live audience.
There is always something wonderful about a live audience.
The great thing about stage is that you have a live audience.
I don't know how to do a show not in front of a live audience.
I still get very scared when I step in front of a live audience.
It is important for an actor to learn how to face a live audience.
The relationship with a live audience seems to me to count for more.
We couldn't even contemplate doing 'Hairspray' without a live audience.
I'm usually pretty good in front of a live audience. I usually like that.
There is no substitute for taking off in flight in front of a live audience.
You have to be on your game with a live audience because anything can change.
If I live to be 90, and I'm planning to, I'll always love performing for a live audience.
I am an artist. An actor performs, whether it's in front of the camera or a live audience.
I've always wanted to do, oddly enough, a live variety show, but only with a live audience.
It is amazing to sing in front of a live audience. It is incredible. The energy is awesome.
I was confident while facing the camera because I was comfortable in front of a live audience.
When you can connect with a live audience and you get that immediate response it's just great.
I've never not appeared in front of a live audience for any longer period than a month or two.
There's nothing more fun than acting on stage with a live audience and that immediate feedback.
When I bring my music to a live audience, I know right away whether it is being appreciated or not.
Live stage is being made as you go along. You feel the energy. There's nothing like a live audience.
Yes, yes, theater in general is just going to always be my first love, performing for a live audience.
If I could live a parallel life, I would be a sitcom star; being in front of a live audience would be great.
We film in front of a live audience, and I was a theater actor before I got into television, so I like that.
There is nothing more joyful to me than hearing a live audience laugh. Especially when I planned it that way!
I'd love to go back and do theater. There's nothing like that instant response and the connection to a live audience.
Performing in front of a live audience can be pretty intimidating, so having a full head of hair was important to me.
I love the rehearsal process in the theatre, and the visceral sense of contact and communication with a live audience.
There's nothing more exciting than that conversation you have with a live audience. It's the best feeling in the world.
Being out there in a high-pressure situation with a live audience and a live TV camera on you, it brings something out.
I love the theater. I love being on stage; I love the live audience. I also love dressing up and all of the make-believe.
There's really nothing like a live audience right there. When you're in a bad show, you can hear the creaks in the chairs.
A live audience with live reactions feeds a different sort of acting that will then inform your film work, and vice versa.
Sitcoms are fun. The whole multi-cam genre is always a lot of fun. You throw a live audience in the mix, and it's even better.
Once you're on, nobody can say, 'Cut it.' You're out there on your own, and there's always that thrill of a real live audience.
But I don't mind, I'm a bit of a touring animal. When I'm on tour that is the greatest thrill for me, playing to a live audience.
I think the idea of doing a live audience taped show every week and just the rush of that would be a dream. I would love to do that.
I've never done anything like 'Brotherhood' before. It was a great challenge to take up a part in a live audience sitcom - it was amazing.
Pretty much every time I try something different or do something in front of a live audience, I truly think they might throw peanuts at me.
When you're filming any show off a live audience, you get a feedback straightaway about how it's going, and the audience always enjoyed it.
Theatre is for you if you truly want to act and test yourself. There is no room for error as you are performing in front of a live audience.
The stage always terrified me. The live audience is just one thing I bewilderingly look back on and say, 'How did I ever participate in that?'
'Big Bang' is very tightly scripted. Because we shoot in front of a live audience, it's basically like doing a filmed piece of theatre, really.
I love performing in front of a live audience and just stepping out in front of ruddy Royal Albert Hall is just something, I can't describe it.
The first time I played in front of a live audience, I realised I wanted to be a musician. I was about four years old and had always liked music.
The only thing I miss from the sitcom format is that immediate gratification of when you're, if we're talking about comedy, of the live audience.