I take my craft seriously.
“I take my craft seriously.”
— Stefon Diggs · Craft
The World Motivation
I take my craft seriously.
“I take my craft seriously.”
— Stefon Diggs · Craft
I take my craft seriously.
I kind of really study different angles of the film. You see how people's bodies are, how they react to certain kind of moves - what foot they step with, what hand they jab with, and all that. Just little things like that, that you pick up when you watch film. Studying is big for me.
I wanted to stay home and go to Maryland because I'm really the man of my house. We lost our father when I was 14. Somebody had to be there, so I had to take it and put that on my shoulders.
I just feel like it's my job to take care of my body. I play a contact sport, 99.9 percent injury rate. As far as being injury-prone or getting hurt, it's going to happen. But it's my job to take care of my body, come week in and week out.
I'm not a politician; I don't have a well-organised PR machine to craft my every word.
There's nothing better than an educated actor - not only educated in his craft but educated in the world.
All I've ever wanted to do is master my craft. I'm a singer, and I want to be a great singer.
'Hill St.' was very good, but it was very impersonal work for me. I wrote about that place as if I was a visitor. It wasn't what my life was like. It was a great place to learn the craft of how to shape a scene, but I wanted a chance to write about more personal themes and obsessions.
Theatre is done largely for the love of the craft. Television makes you famous. And films immortalize you. That's the relationship between the three.