I'm a bit of a gourmet chef. I love cooking - mostly Thai food.
Internet freedom is a bit of a Rorschach test: it means different things to different people.
I'm 33 now and I seem to have hit a fitness plane. Shifting the wobbly bits isn't as easy as it used to be.
My family don't watch a lot of what I do. Films are a bit too arty-farty for them, certainly the ones I do!
I'm extremely blessed because I travel extensively for my work, but I always try to incorporate a bit of leisure with business.
I got into politics a little bit by chance, as a person from the first generation of the Solidarity movement.
In some of the L.A. clubs, people can act too cool to get into your music. That can get to be a bit much.
The forties are very cool and very pastoral. The fifties look like they're pastoral, and then you get a bit more turbulence.
Basically, I believe the world is a jungle, and if it's not a bit of a jungle in the home, a child cannot possibly be fit to enter the outside world.
When I joined Custer I donned the uniform of a soldier. It was a bit awkward at first but I soon got to be perfectly at home in men's clothes.
Right now, I have to admit, that I'm more interested in giving people a little bit of hope and goodness.
I hope people think of me as a bit older. I do have a beard. That makes me look very old.
I read daft history books. Sometimes the books I read are a bit crackers or strange.
My mum lives near Holkham Bay in Norfolk, and with my dad by the coast in Suffolk, I spend quite a bit of time by the sea.
I suppose I was a little bit of what would be called today a nerd. I didn't have girlfriends, and really I wasn't a very social boy.
It's a great big step for me to open my heart up even a little bit.
In all good westerns, the good guy is always a little bit questionable because he kind-of has to make moral judgments.
It feels like as you get a bit older, you've worked out the things that are good for your life apart from with acting.
I've always been good at putting things behind me - I fall apart, do my crying bit and then put it away and move it.
I was a little bit ashamed of American TV because I thought, 'None of the shows my father works on are as funny as my father.'
Every job leaves its residue, a bit of extra knowledge, a new skill-set.