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I have no idea what 'method actor' means.
I'm a rational person, and I'm not a method actor. You don't need to call me by my character's name while I'm not shooting.
I'm not a method actor per se, but if I'm playing a character that, at its core of its persona, has experiences I don't have, I try to search out and get firsthand experiences of similar sorts so I have something to fantasize about.
I am not a method actor, though I studied for a year with Lee Strasburg.
I guess I'm probably a Method actor; I don't know... I just think of it as staying in the zone.
I remember my first scene with Alan Rickman, and I was anxious because he is a slight 'method' actor; as soon as he is in his cloak, he walks and talks like Snape - it is quite terrifying. But I really wanted to talk to him because 'Robin Hood' was one of my favourite films.
You know, I've never been much of a method actor. I feel like, with every project I go in extremely prepared and I like to have a good time.
For me it would be unhealthy to be a method actor; I'm not mentally stable enough for that - I need to separate my two worlds.
I'm sort of a reverse Method actor. In my personal life, I become my characters. After 'One Tree Hill', I started dressing in Converse and ripped jeans and hoodies. On 'Awkward', it manifests in how I speak.
I think it is very important to be a method actor.