Chiwetel Ejiofor Quotes
Top 42 wise famous quotes and sayings by Chiwetel Ejiofor
Chiwetel Ejiofor Famous Quotes & Sayings
Discover top inspirational quotes from Chiwetel Ejiofor on Wise Famous Quotes.
Friends at school were always quite shocked that we holidayed in Nigeria, but it was all pretty middle-class, really.
There's always something ridiculous happening on the set, especially when people get tired because of the long days.
Reporters tend to launch on what seems to be the clearest, most stark aspects of someone's life in terms of an interview.
The inherited tradition is that we don't tell stories about slavery from the perspective of the slave. It's told through the president or the lawyer.
I am struck by how, walking down the street, I'm rarely made aware of my race, but that among journalists, race is absolutely massive.
Sometimes television can just jump from one bit of plot to the next, and the words fill in the in-between.
Since I started acting, I always or often find work takes precedence with me. And that is not necessarily a great rule for life.
I would love to be a fly on the wall watching other directors and actors to see what their process is like.
A lot of people ask me about my father's passing when I was young, which I'm never comfortable with. I invariably move around that subject.
All roads lead home in the end. You've got to keep that in mind always - in your work and in your life.
I'm constantly looking to see whether I look the same as I did earlier, whether I've put on or lost any weight.
I feel that audiences are very sophisticated, and part of my challenge is to keep them engaged because they are so complex.
If you're looking at people like Patrice Lumumba, you are looking at people who had a very definite plan, and events overran them.
That global poverty would end. That people would be able to eat. It's the worst shame in the world that people go hungry.
I'm constantly discovering things. Like Bobby Bland. Right now I suppose I'm into the Eighties, which turned out to be a great musical period.
I love the theater community and theater life, and would love to figure out the distinctive differences between Broadway and the West End.
I believe people instinctively know that about writing, yet people get confused about that when it comes to acting.
I was the classic middle child in some ways, the one who could have been a priest in an alternate universe.
Different people approach the universe in different ways, but they also approach their own expectations in different ways.
I've always enjoyed doing a huge variety of roles, which I think helps, instead of settling for the things I might be most comfortable with.
I was able to go on stage and work until it felt right or felt good. It meant that I very quickly realised that it was the job for me.
I enjoy doing everything, comedy and drama. I just look for the characters really and what they offer.
I don't ever feel like I've had a moment where I am like, "There it is; perfect and holy in all ways."
I have always been very fortunate in my working life in terms of the, I say that like I've not been fortunate at all in my private life.
Working in this industry, I do feel that science and creativity turned out to be a very useful combination for me.
The only way to be an actor is to find ways to work as an actor, even if that means doing a one-man show by a river.