I think actors always have that fear of unemployment so when the opportunities are there, you just jump on them.
I go through insanity before a show. It's not really a process but it's like absolute mortal fear.
If you take your fear and mash it into something that's actually useful, then it doesn't feel like it wins.
If you have stage fright, it never goes away. But then I wonder: is the key to that magical performance because of the fear?
If you don't go towards the thing you fear, you won't be able to say you lived.
I don't ever want to be hugely famous because I had a little taste of it after 'East Is East' and 'Bend It.'
I do dead Canadians. If he's dead and he's Canadian and he's famous, I'll be playing him at some point.
My discrepancy with children in the industry is that they are made famous before they know who they are as human beings.
Sometimes people offer you plays, they offer you parts, but they only offer it because I'm famous.
I have a theory that if you're famous more years than you're not famous, then you get a little nutty.
I've got something to live for, because I always wanted to be an artist; I always wanted to be famous.
I can do whatever I want - I'm rich, I'm famous, and I'm bigger than you.
It's always a little mind-boggling to realize that these famous actors know who I am.
I also want to go to an Italian island and do cuisine properly with some famous Italian chef and, like, his mother.
We're teaching young girls that this is what they should be focusing on: rich and famous girls who are rich and famous for nothing.
I'm hardly the most notable person in 'Zombieland.' The other actors in it are way more famous than I am.
Decide very early on: do you want to be an actor or do you want to be famous? Because they're very different routes.
I wanted to be famous; I wanted to perform. Those things I really, really wanted more than anything else.
You're asking the wrong girl about fame. I'm hardly famous. I wouldn't want to trade places with anyone else.
I realise there's an innate paradox in promoting oneself on the one hand and saying, 'Oh, I don't want to be famous,' on the other.
But things move in circles: one minute it's the models who are famous, then it's the actresses, then it's the designers.