I grew up in Vancouver and my father drove me to every single one of my acting lessons, auditions, and jobs.
What this bill says is it reiterates again the deadline, and that the Senate should act before the deadline, and that's what the American people are expecting.
I've always believed in trying to be as open as possible. I think it almost comes with the job - if you can bare your emotions, it makes for better acting.
Very often the Group actor is a critic when he's acting and an actor when he's criticizing.
I would act whether or not I was paid. I would be involved in ensemble groups. I would have the desire to tell stories.
I believe that if you show people the problems and you show them the solutions they will be moved to act.
It was such a paradox for me that the only thing I know how to do is act, but that the first thing I abandoned while writing were the characters.
Metal is easily my favorite thing - Exodus and Anthrax and Megadeth - so it just kind of organically came through in the standup act.
I don't think it's any secret I've never been an advocate for the Affordable Care Act.
The tragedy of bold, forthright, industrious people is that they act so continuously without much thinking, that it becomes dry and empty.
You know, acting is very fascinating. But being an actress is not, because you become so concentrated on yourself.
For lack of a better word, acting is therapeutic. You really are breaking down barriers, exorcising demons and finding more out about yourself.
I have always enjoyed performing, but I think when I was in the fifth grade was when I discovered that I really loved acting.
Students must have initiative; they should not be mere imitators. They must learn to think and act for themselves - and be free.
Juilliard is wonderful in that they don't pick just one way of working. They give you a palette. There is method acting. There is a lot of attention to Shakespeare and verse.
You never see the entire script of political theater until long after the last scene has been acted out.
Societies can easily talk themselves into conflict and misery. But they can also talk, and act, their way out.
Listening; our propensity to complicate this effortless act is only matched by our ability to relentlessly obscure the obvious.
The more I examine the issue of clutter, the more effort I put into combating it, because it really does act as a weight.
What a man believes may be ascertained, not from his creed, but from the assumptions on which he habitually acts.
Acting is like roller skating. Once you know how to do it, it is neither stimulating nor exciting.