Find Your Type

Famous Figures

Historical and fictional figures mapped to the sixteen values.

Filter by value
Mastery · SAJD
actor Contemporary

Daniel Day-Lewis

Day-Lewis' total-immersion preparation - learning to box for The Boxer, living outdoors for The Last of the Mohicans, staying in character between takes for years - and his documented refusal to take roles unless he was prepared to make that level of commitment, reflect a Mastery orientation that treats acting as a craft demanding everything.

Explore Mastery →
Mastery · SAJD
actor Contemporary

Meryl Streep

Streep's documented acquisition of accents, instruments, physical skills, and professional knowledge for each role - the Polish for Sophie's Choice, the Italian for Heartburn, the years of preparation for Margaret Thatcher - reflect a Mastery orientation in which the actor's obligation is total preparatory commitment.

Explore Mastery →
Mastery · SAJD
actor 20th century

Charlie Chaplin

Chaplin directed, starred in, scored, and often co-wrote every film he made, reshaping the Tramp persona across decades of continuous refinement. His documented practice of shooting scenes dozens of times until the timing was exact, and his belief that comedy was more technically demanding than tragedy, reflect a Mastery orientation.

Explore Mastery →