"It's always a help when you have worked with someone as you've got to know them a bit already"
About this Quote
There is a quiet pragmatism in Burrows's line, the kind you only hear from someone who’s spent years watching how chemistry gets manufactured on cue. “It’s always a help” is deliberately modest, almost throwaway, but it smuggles in a big truth about acting: intimacy is work, and familiarity is a shortcut. The phrase “a bit already” is doing heavy lifting, signaling that what matters isn’t friendship so much as a baseline of trust and predictability. On a set where time is money and emotions are scheduled, “knowing them” means fewer surprises, fewer protective walls, less social friction before the real labor begins.
The intent feels less like romanticizing collaboration and more like acknowledging the unglamorous mechanics behind “natural” performances. Burrows frames prior experience as a practical asset, the way a seasoned crew might prefer a camera package they’ve used before. That’s not cynicism; it’s professionalism. It hints at the odd paradox of screen work: you’re asked to be psychologically open in an environment that can be physically crowded, fragmented, and relentlessly public.
Contextually, the quote sits neatly inside contemporary conversations about consent, boundaries, and safe working environments in film and TV. Knowing a co-star “a bit already” can mean confidence that they’ll respect limits, hit marks, take direction without ego, and play vulnerable scenes without turning them into a power contest. The subtext is that “chemistry” isn’t magic; it’s rapport, history, and the freedom to fail in front of someone who’s seen you do it before.
The intent feels less like romanticizing collaboration and more like acknowledging the unglamorous mechanics behind “natural” performances. Burrows frames prior experience as a practical asset, the way a seasoned crew might prefer a camera package they’ve used before. That’s not cynicism; it’s professionalism. It hints at the odd paradox of screen work: you’re asked to be psychologically open in an environment that can be physically crowded, fragmented, and relentlessly public.
Contextually, the quote sits neatly inside contemporary conversations about consent, boundaries, and safe working environments in film and TV. Knowing a co-star “a bit already” can mean confidence that they’ll respect limits, hit marks, take direction without ego, and play vulnerable scenes without turning them into a power contest. The subtext is that “chemistry” isn’t magic; it’s rapport, history, and the freedom to fail in front of someone who’s seen you do it before.
Quote Details
| Topic | Team Building |
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