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
Cheap liquor is a magic potion that can turn you into a puppet cowboy before it kills you.
If the victories we create in our heads were let loose on reality, the world we know would drown in blazing happiness.
My advice to you is be boring, square, asshole parents... When I have kids, the most recent CD I will own - Phil Collins, No Jacket Required, and I'll rave about it. 'Do you like rock 'n' roll? 'Cause this is rockin' good stuff, kid.'
I think I realized it was an art form at the beginning, but it took me a really long time before I was able to view what I was performing myself as an art form.
Every zombie story is fundamentally about a breakdown of order, with the infrastructure intact. That infrastructure might be on fire, yes.
Meal isn't over when I'm full. Meal's over when I hate myself.
There are times when I have to take, I call it a 'silence bath,' where I shut off all of the external gadgets. I go walk around, talk to people, and just live life for a while.
People will find transformation and transcendence in a McDonald's hash brown if it's all they've got.
There's all kinds of those moments in your life where either through a weird set of circumstances, or a song you hear, or a smell you smell, or one person says something totally out of the context without the meaning that you assigned to it, but you snap back to the way you were when you were 14 or 15. We all deal with that.
As much as I know people love the method and what you can draw out of yourself, a lot of acting is very imaginative.
Doing 'Young Adult' was really reassuring to me in a lot of ways. It confirmed a lot of suspicions I had about great actors.
If you play comedic scenes like they're really serious, then it's so much more funny than if you're going for a laugh.
The Kentucky Fried Chicken corporation made a bobble head of me and sent it to my management. No card, nothing.
To get asked to do stuff like 'United States Of Tara' and 'Caprica' is terrific. I can't complain.