I've watched 'Clueless' as many times as humanly possible. Like, I would run home from school to watch it. Like, I can quote it backwards.
I think it is just a function of the fact that I moved around so much as a child that I learnt early on to make every place my home.
I'm kind of a homebody. My husband says I like to just stay home and do nothing, but that's just how I am.
There are times when I'm driving home after a day's shooting, thinking to myself, That scene would've been so much better if I had written it out.
I enjoy being in Toronto - there's lots of energy, lots of neat different neighbourhoods - but Vancouver is still home and always will be. I miss going for walks on the ocean with beautiful mountains.
The most inspiring objects are books. I have about 5,000 volumes in my home library. It's an unending source of visuals and ideas.
I've had people following me home or standing outside my house. It's strange. I just don't think people were meant to be worshipped or idolised.
I never felt at home in London, because people were constantly telling me I didn't belong here, so after a while, you tend to believe that.
What power can poverty have over a home where loving hearts are beating with a consciousness of untold riches of the head and heart?
Recently, I dreamed that I returned home to find my wife had married Ray Winstone. They were kind and let me stay, but the whole thing was awkward.
When I'm not acting, I like to go home and be really normal. So I usually grow out my hair until I get the next part.
That was my aspiration, so I was there in a seminary with just boys who were studying to be priests. Pretty rigorous schooling; we never got home, we stayed there all year.
Often, before returning home, I would take a long and roundabout way and pass by the peaceful ramparts from where I had glimpses of other provinces, and a sight of the distant country.
Should we continue to spend billions to subsidize foreign military dictatorships, or should we concentrate on taking better care of the one we have right here at home?
If you're a misanthrope you stay at home. There are certain writers who really don't like other people. I'm not like that, I don't think.
I'm half Puerto Rican and half Jewish and so, in some ways, living in many worlds at once is where I feel most at home.
I'm sure that when my daughter will bring home her first boyfriend, I'll be so intimidating that he'll run away, but embarrassing as well, just to have a bit of fun.
My mother raised me in the church. I was not allowed to stay home on Sunday; there was no option. I sang in the choir all the way up until I went to college.
I watched Titanic when I got back home from the hospital, and cried. I knew that my IQ had been damaged.
I guess I can't live without Netflix because I would have nothing to do. All I do is sit home and watch movies.
Since belief determines behavior, doesn't it make sense that we should be teaching ethical, moral values in every home and in every school in America?