Rowan Atkinson Quotes
Top 40 wise famous quotes and sayings by Rowan Atkinson
Rowan Atkinson Famous Quotes & Sayings
Discover top inspirational quotes from Rowan Atkinson on Wise Famous Quotes.
I like to juggle with one ball at a time. Then I put the ball down and do nothing for extended periods of time.
My personal problem is that I take the business of film-making so seriously that I find it very difficult to relax.
And what's interesting about him as a comic character is that the custard pie hardly ever ends up on his face.
I have always regarded Mr. Bean as a timeless, ageless character, and I would rather he be remembered as a character mostly in his 30s and 40s.
I'm as poor as a church mouse, that's just had an enormous tax bill on the very day his wife ran off with another mouse, taking all the cheese.
Loved the show as a child and felt I could not do it justice. [on turning down the role of the new Doctor Who
I'm not a collector. I don't like the toy cupboard syndrome that causes so many good cars to evaporate.
To Be Successful You Don't Need Beautiful Face And Heroic Body, What You Need is Skillful Mind And Ability To Perform
If you're a serious actor, it's when you know you're going to die tomorrow that you really start to feel it.
I have to say that I've always believed perfectionism is more of a disease than a quality. I do try to go with the flow but I can't let go.
I don't much enjoy Back and Forth. I mean, I think it has its own particular qualities, but I think it's inferior to any of the half-hour ones we did.
I would return to the Blackadder character if the opportunity came up. I have no qualms about that at all.
I find his films about as funny as getting an arrow through the neck and discovering there's a gas bill tied to it.
The older you get, the more you realise how happenstance ... has helped to determine your path through life.
The Scarlet Pimpernel is the most over-rated human being since Judas Iscariot won the A.D.31 'Best Disciple' competition.
I suddenly think the job of acting is a difficult one. It's not as flip, irrelevant and shallow a calling as I thought it was in the Eighties.
Mr. Bean is at his best when he is not using words, but I am equally at home in both verbal and nonverbal expression.
A law which attempts to say you can criticise and ridicule ideas as long as they are not religious ideas is a very peculiar law indeed.
When I was doing Bean more than I've done him in the last few years, I did strange things - like appearing on chat shows in character as Mr. Bean.
Funny things tend not to happen to me. I am not a natural comic. I need to think about things a lot before I can be even remotely amusing.
I can be reasonably funny and light-hearted when I'm in the company of good friends, but I'm not a jokesmith. I tend to be quite serious.
I think you're bound to get a sense of any character that you play. It's not something you often do in comedy.