I played a scene at the end of my first year, and that's how I was discovered.
Jeff Bridges taught me a lot about how to keep a scene fresh.
Life is but a play and we are merely the characters of our own scene.
We only did probably two, three takes on every scene we did, at the most.
Breaking is when someone starts to laugh in the middle of a scene, which is so fun to watch.
I didn't disappear; I started writing songs and worked behind the scenes.
I've worked hard and accomplished what I've accomplished in the heavyweight scene.
The scene where I took my eyelashes off we did in two takes.
Every change of scene requires new expositions, descriptions, explanations.
Poop humor is fun. If you do the toilet scenes well and commit to them, they can be really, really powerful.
If a scene is longer than three pages, it better be for a good reason.
It's hard to leave behind scenes and characters I am in love with.
I happen to know there is nothing sexy or romantic about love scenes. They are just awful to do.
I love action. I love doing fight scenes; I always have. I love it.
The New York fashion scene is crazy, madness, but I love the energy.
In 'Taxi,' I kept doing the same scene for three years. I was underused.
A song versus an album is not like a scene versus a play.
I will walk out on a scene if it's all lit and ready to go but it's not happening.
There's no one more willing to do something than an actor when it comes to perfecting a scene.
I don't really feel part of the pop scene.
I have never been over fond of scenes anywhere.