If you have two parents who have to work, who want to work, you need to have someone to guide your child.
I'm profoundly lucky. I really like it. I really like my work. I've liked it since I was 5 years old.
Everything that I do has to be something new and something challenging, or with people that I want to work with. I take jobs for different reasons.
I think, as a woman, you do sort of have to work twice as hard, but I don't feel as if I wasn't given opportunities.
I have been extremely fortunate to have incredibly special fans support my work throughout my twelve year career.
I have less than no interest in trying to replicate another brilliant actor's work, thank you very much.
All actors say they're concerned about the state of the theatre, but what they're really concerned about is that there'll be less work around.
Some people say it's scarier to direct the people you work with; not me, I'm a team guy.
The phone's not ringing off the hook, but that's ok by me. I feel very fortunate, work to me has become a kind of hobby.
It's fun to play dress up for work, but when you have those off-days, it's nice to just be low-key.
When I am rehearsing for a play, I try to read nothing that might distract my concentration from the work in progress.
I'm not married and I don't think that's going to work out for me. I'm not even bitter, I'm just exhausted.
I'm a pain in the ass to all of the costume designers with whom I work because I have very strong feelings about the subject.
I think the most liberating thing I did early on was to free myself from any concern with my looks as they pertained to my work.
I think when you work on a Woody Allen film the actors become a real company, probably more than on any other film.
I take the responsibility of choosing seriously because it becomes an indelible part of your body of work. Something has to sing to me.
I've also learned that sometimes, no matter how much you want things to work, you have to accept that sometimes they just don't.
Before I pursued acting full-time, I had every intention of going into some form of law enforcement work.
When you work at 'The Daily Show,' you have to give 100 percent, or you're gone. The competitiveness and the minds that work in those offices are incredible.
Winning is very important to me. I wouldn't be happy with anything less. And I work towards my goal.
A lot of American actors I work with are in character all day long. You can't talk to them. It's Method and the whole thing.