Will Patton
Will Patton
William Rankin "Will" Pattonis an American actor. He starred as Colonel Dan Weaver in the TNT science fiction series Falling Skies. He also appeared in films such as Remember the Titans, Armageddon, Gone in 60 Seconds and The Punisher. He appeared opposite Kevin Costner in two films: No Way Outand The Postman. Patton’s father, Bill Patton, was a playwright and acting/directing instructor. Patton has been in many films, starting in 1981. He has done many television appearances as well, starting...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionMovie Actor
Date of Birth14 June 1954
CityCharleston, SC
CountryUnited States of America
I always like the physical comedy because I actually do a lot of it in my own life, but not on purpose. I am the klutziest person on the planet. It's easy for me.
When people have eating disorders, they can't actually see what they truly look like because they're so clouded with their emotions. Read more at: https://tr.im/4ZtN7
If you have the capacity to love, you have the capacity to love anyone.
No matter how you look, we all hurt the same, cry the same, and feel joy the same.
I don't try to intellectualize characters too much. But I always think of the audience. I always make sure that my characters are likeable.
Maybe at the core of me, I'm a survivor, but I don't do it on purpose. Sometimes, in acting of course with your performance, some of your own personal character seeps through. My performance goal has always been to perform for the audience. People pay their hard earned money, and so I always desire to give all of myself in every single scene.
I'm an extremist. Either I'm being healthy and organic, or I want a big, juicy In-N-Out burger, I want it all now! It sure makes me happy.
The Fiscal Court will continue negotiations with landowners to secure the best site possible.
An audition? I don't know. I guess it kind of turned out that way. It was pretty easy. I've done all this before.
An accent mark, perhaps, instead of a whole western accent -- a point of punctuation rather than a uniform twang. That is how it should be worn: as a quiet point of character reference, an apt phrase of sartorial allusion -- macho, sotto voce.
It is a great thing for him to have read so many books. You just don't usually hear that about a first-grader.
When you're shooting a TV show, there's not a lot of time to build character.
We would be silly to say that race issues don't exist in 2014.
The last thing we need is women on TV hating each other.