Writers, directors and actors have been drawing on psychoanalytic theory since the 1920's.
On perfect nights, these actors can draw the attention - or at least the business card - of someone big in the business.
But the actors and the movie drew most of the publicity.
The actors drew energy from the audience's reactions, and the audience got a better and better performance.
During the play, the actors who play art students actually draw Ms. Carlin.
The actor could have drawn from his cinematic background and his identification with the small-town American landscape.
I suppose when you compel actors to draw on their own resources, you have to take the banal with the startling.
The right actor, it seems, can draw blood from even the most artificial structure.
The other actors, too, draw on direct experience, and that alone.
The actors drew on huge, pretentious red lips to make the face even more over the top.