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Adam Driver in The Art of Discovery book by Jeff Vespa, 2014
“Older actors inspire me. I equate it to how the ancient Romans would respect their elders. I worked with Dianne West on an obscure Ostrovsky play, The Forest. Dianne was relentless. Once, I was on my way back to the rehearsal from lunch, and I passed a pizza place. I saw Dianne sitting in the back with her head in her hands, looking completely depleted. It seemed like she was so tortured from living to make this play work. There was a woman who I've watched for years in movies, and think is a brilliant actor, still asking herself the same questions that she's asked herself since her first movie. She helped me discover that it’s more about the journey and the process and not about the end result: because an actor’s journey never ends”-Adam Driver, The Art of Discovery
“Older actors inspire me. I equate it to how the ancient Romans would respect their elders. I worked with Dianne West on an obscure Ostrovsky play, The Forest. Dianne was relentless. Once, I was on my way back to the rehearsal from lunch, and I passed a pizza place. I saw Dianne sitting in the back with her head in her hands, looking completely depleted. It seemed like she was so tortured from living to make this play work. There was a woman who I've watched for years in movies, and think is a brilliant actor, still asking herself the same questions that she's asked herself since her first movie. She helped me discover that it’s more about the journey and the process and not about the end result: because an actor’s journey never ends”-Adam Driver, The Art of Discovery
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