Here, for the record, is the speech Mark Rylance gave at the Tony Awards when he won for his performance in the current revival of Boeing-Boeing. This is from the writings of a poet named Lewis Jenkins…
When you are in town, wearing some kind of uniform is helpful, policeman, priest, etc. Driving a tank is very impressive or a car with official lettering on the side. If that isn't to your taste, you could join the revolution, wear an armband, carry a homemade flag tied to a broom handle, or a placard bearing an incendiary slogan. At the very least, you should wear a suit and carry a briefcase and a cell phone, or wear a team jacket and a baseball cap and carry a cell phone. If you go into the woods, the back country, someplace past all human habitation, it is a good idea to wear orange and carry a gun, or depending on the season, carry a fishing pole, or a camera with a big lens. Otherwise, it might appear that you have no idea what you are doing, that you are merely wandering the earth, no particular reason for being here, no particular place to go.
That was the man's acceptance speech. No mention of the play or his co-stars or director or his family or his agent or anything. He just performed that. And the audience loved it.