Between 21-30 women go through humungous changes. After that, they've generally achieved what they wanted, and they're more settled.
The worker must have bread, but she must have roses, too. Help, you women of privilege, give her the ballot to fight with.
If I pop off and do something drastic, everyone's going to realise because they know I'm 50. Anyway, middle-aged women are sensational.
When women's parts are being written, they are more and more for under 30s who are nubile and beautiful. Actresses over 40 are finding very little happening.
I'm very shocked when I look at television and I see such an aggressive youth and image obsession in the representation of women on our screens.
No one is more arrogant toward women, more aggressive or scornful, than the man who is anxious about his virility.
There are also just as many, if not more, women who are anxious to hold down the status quo.
When women are stressed, they either eat too much and get fat, or they eat not so much and get thin, and the latter is what happens to me.
Gender and race got very entwined in the 19th century, as abolition broke out, and then women wanted the right to speak about it.
People's view of exotic or Asian women are changing. It's much nicer to hear 'She's pretty' than 'She's pretty - for an Asian woman.'
I'm really a strong advocate of ageing because the messages that the media and advertising give to women infuriate me: ie that it's a bad thing to get old.
Things don't get better when you become well known or go on TV. I'm just being rejected by a better class of women.
I often think a lot of women's attraction to vampires is based on the fact that vampires come from centuries ago, from eras of chivalry and courtly virtues.
We women know how to take care of everybody so well. But the one person we have written out of the equation is us.
I think, at a certain point, it's better for women not to have any alcohol because it can make your face, breasts and midsection get very bloated.
When I was growing up, I always saw Karen Millen as a resource for women who were a bit older.
I don't mind a dirty girl. But what I find tragic is when we, as women, become not the subject of our own story but someone else's object.
I get so much mail from young women saying that they are so insecure when they look at me, but they don't realize all of the flaws that I have.
Most women don't play like guys do: they don't wrestle, fight, get into brawls. They don't know how to express themselves in a physical, active way.
Once we increase the proportion of women in technical roles, the challenge is to retain them and ease the transition to senior positions.
Now, since I'm a husband and father, discrimination against women isn't just political, it's personal.