In music, the punctuation is absolutely strict, the bars and rests are absolutely defined. But our punctuation cannot be quite strict, because we have to relate it to the audience. In other words we are continually changing the score.
I've skated after Yuzu a handful of times. The only thing I can take away from it is to be prepared for the Pooh-bears to be raining down from the audience.
The audience in the country has evolved, and for them, it is about real characters.
When you tour, you regain the music and the connection with the audience.
Rehearsals and screening rooms are often unreliable because they can't provide the chemistry between an audience and what appears on the stage or screen.
I request the audience to not mix cinema with politics.
At Vienna, one of the audience affirmed publicly that my performance was not surprising, for he had distinctly seen, while I was playing my variations, the devil at my elbow, directing my arm and guiding my bow. My resemblance to the devil was a proof of my origin.
You do a clean show and it's over and the audience have enjoyed themselves and you've enjoyed yourself, and you haven't had to resort to shock.
When I first spit my first rhyme in public on my school bus, I had an audience.
I've become 40, my audience is partly the same age.
Going out and trying new stuff on an audience is a scary thing.
Even if an episode is self-contained, the preceding episodes always affect how the audience takes it in.
I actually think I have an audience member's sensibility about going to the movies.
My seventeen years of teaching inform my sense of audience in every line I write.
I felt that The Who had ended because we'd lost touch with our original Shepherd's Bush audience.
For instance, 'The Sixth Sense' had mediocre to bad reviews. Slowly, the audience pushed it and it received critical attention.
I hate a sleepy, nonresponsive, and silent audience because it fails to excite me as a performer.
When I was a kid, and Elvis Presley broke through to a middle class, white audience, it was a sociological phenomenon that lasted through the Beatles and even a bit through Fleetwood Mac.
Our strong suit is what we do, and our audience.
I know my audience, and they're not people that the studios know anything about.