Jesse Eisenberg Quotes
Top 75 wise famous quotes and sayings by Jesse Eisenberg
Jesse Eisenberg Famous Quotes & Sayings
Discover top inspirational quotes from Jesse Eisenberg on Wise Famous Quotes.
I'm hardly the most notable person in 'Zombieland.' The other actors in it are way more famous than I am.
Nothing is harder than working with an actor who doesn't take it seriously or show up in the same way that you are.
I cried every day of first grade. In class. Which meant I ended up getting comfortable emoting in a place where it wasn't the norm.
I don't watch the movies I've been in. I try to stay as little aware of the final product as possible, because my job doesn't really change.
I am actually going to two therapists right now. I don't know, I actually feel like therapy has just made me more uncomfortable.
The first rule of Zombieland: Cardio. When the zombie outbreak first hit, the first to go, for obvious reasons ... were the fatties.
You can tell when you watch a movie, usually, what the actors' experience was on the movie, because even the smallest of roles were interesting.
I grew up in Queens and New Jersey. I started doing children's theater when I was seven to get out of school because I didn't fit in.
As an actor, you try to bring as much of yourself to a part to try and create a feeling of authenticity and emotional truth and resonance.
I think I prioritize other people's opinions of me very highly, which is not necessarily a good thing - it's a thing that causes a lot of anxiety.
I did children's theater when I was younger, and then when I was about 14 I started doing theater in New York City.
Every character I play has to be the hero of his own story, the way we're all heroes of our own lives.
I don't attribute an actor's great success to their own individual performance when it's something as collaborative as a movie.
If God is all-powerful, He cannot be all good. And if He is all good, then He cannot be all-powerful. And neither can you be.
Actors dread working with studios because they dictate what you do in a way that independent movies can't.
Every relationship has a kind of pattern, I guess, and maybe the pattern is more important than the stuff that makes up the pattern.
When you're on set you don't realize the way something is going to look since you're on the other side of the camera.
I purposefully isolate myself from anything that has to do with any press. I don't read any press about myself.
I write all the time because I'm lonely. When you're acting, you're working every day all day. But then you have long amounts of time off.
I personally don't feel the need to be radical for its own sake, but I probably couldn't if I tried anyway.
The only suggestions I get on my plays is to make them more of what they already are, and that's wonderful.
Because going through a hard life with someone else is better than going through an easy life alone.
I'm not on Page Six, because I don't have anything salacious happening in my life ... unfortunately.
I like driving; I don't drive since I live in New York. I don't have an opportunity to drive, like, ever.
I had great difficulty in school interacting with others, and I took refuge in the contrived setting of play acting, which is what I still do.
The frustrating part of being a movie actor is waiting in your trailer to do two takes of a scene you've prepared for two months.
I don't go to movies, I don't own a television, I don't buy magazines and I try not to receive mail, so I'm not really aware of popular culture.
I have a job that requires me to be in the public eye in the way that makes me extra careful about sharing information.
I grew up in a secular suburban Jewish household where we only observed the religion on very specific times like a funeral or a Bar Mitzvah.
The happiest moments for me, creatively, are doing readings of a play around a table where there's no audience.
I know some amazing actors who are not mortified every moment of the day, so my feeling is that maybe you don't have to be a wreck to be good.
The movies that are really big, at least in my experience, oftentimes don't have characters that I feel as personally connected to.
I live in New York City, so there's so much stimulation when you walk outside, it does not require a television in the home.
People ask me what my hobbies are in interviews, and I always say biking. But all I bike for is to get to rehearsal more quickly.
It's a really unique acting opportunity to play two roles who are not only interacting with each other, but vastly different.