The fidelity question is difficult for me. Society has made us believe we're supposed to be monogamous when we're not killer whales, or whatever the monogamous species is.
I think most couples drift apart because of comparisons. Unfortunately, in our society a perfect match is when the man is more successful than the woman.
I really do think the things that make our society what it is are under threat. It should be about everyone having the potential to be what they're going to be.
From an egotistical point of view, I'm always interested in roles that push me as a person. I'm interested in humans as animals and as products of society.
In high school, I once sang 'Let's Get It On' and 'Brown Sugar' with a band that included my English teacher and my math teacher.
I spent most of my high school years on movie sets and I'd have like one teacher, which was really bad.
I want to clear up a few myths about myself. People have written that I was a kindergarten teacher and a former Miss Texas, and neither is true.
I wanted to be Whitney Houston at first, and when I started taking voice lessons, my voice teacher kind of geared me more towards opera.
I got into acting my junior year of high school. We got a new hot drama teacher and I was like 'Alright, I'll try drama.'
My brother is a policeman; my sister's an English teacher. When I hear what they make versus what I make, it's ridiculous.
My mother was a Sunday school teacher. So I am a byproduct of prayer. My mom just kept on praying for her son.
So far I’m not seeing a lot of difference between me and a carnival con-man.
Why not see which is brighter: your aura or the sun?
None of us are meant to be or do anything. We decide what we're going to be.
Ah, those two. In a fight, they’re lethal. Around each other, they melt.
I found the candles—atrocious air freshening ones that smelled like fake pine.
Besides, I could hardly complain to the administration that I was being forced to learn magic.
I started elocution lessons because I was being teased, and I had a brilliant drama teacher. At the age of 14, I appeared at the National Theatre in 'The Crucible.'
I've been very competitive by nature from a young age, whether it was eating a bowl of pasta faster than somebody else, or always wanting to be the first one in line.
I was grateful to Ben the way you are grateful to someone who is unexpectedly kind.
I'm blessed because I had my mom as a teacher - sixth through eighth grade - and she is one of the best teachers I've ever had.