I had to work out that it was something that could move, without having everybody in spray painted leotards.
It's like a kitchen, acting. Put a chef in a kitchen and they will have different recipes. Whatever your recipe, what works for you won't work for another.
Writing is hard work, but a lot of fun, too. It allows me to live out some of my fantasies.
I feel like, with myself, I ruined myself to the point where I wasn't functional enough to work for anybody, even myself. I wasn't working.
I think if I've worked anything through with screenwriting it's that I'm not going to be able to work anything through.
Writing is part intuition and part trial and error, but mostly it's very hard work.
I only want to work with actors that really get it and make it work. I didn't want it to be a star-driven thing anymore.
I'm just an individual who doesn't feel that I need to have somebody qualify my work in any particular way. I'm working for me.
I play a curator, the most American part you can think of. My work is to protect the Declaration of Independence. I work at the National Archives in Washington.
We all have the temptation to be backseat drivers when it comes to decisions that don't work out the way we want.
I have a responsibility to the people who work for me, the manufacturers I work with. There is no point to clothes that don't sell.
At this point in my career, it doesn't bother me much that I'm probably hopelessly typecast. I like to work, and horror films definitely keep me working.
Joe Gibbs helped define what the Washington Redskins stand for - integrity, hard work, determination, winning and championships.
You hear the same work by different orchestras, different conductors, violinists, pianists, singers, and slowly, the work reveals itself and begins to live deeper in you.
Bands today have to learn their craft by putting the hard work in that we did when we were young performers.
So, in a way I was hedging and saying that if the Olympic stuff doesn't work out at least I can be a lawyer.
The major work of the world is not done by geniuses. It is done by ordinary people, with balance in their lives, who have learned to work in an extraordinary manner.
There have been countless times where I've worked out with my kids crawling around all over the place. You just make it work.
There are the manufacturing multitudes of England; they must have work, and find markets for their work; if machines and the Black Country are ugly, famine would be uglier still.
I was plunged into what was known as the debutante social whirl. This was one of the ways fathers justified their own hard work and sacrifices.
I work out two, two and a half hours a day. For 'Immortals,' it was body-weight stuff: crunches, pullups, and martial arts-based cardio.