I'm an actor, coming from New York theater.
I went to University of Victoria on Vancouver Island and their theater program.
My film career was always to support my theater career.
Most theater tells you what to think.
In the theater, as an actor, you're welcoming people into your house.
I was doing community theater since I was about nine.
The theater is reaching as many different demographics as it can now.
Communication is very important. And the arts do that, whether it's film or theater.
I had a Jesuit education, and I consider acting and the theater as kind of a calling - a vocation.
I like time off because I also have a life outside of theater.
That's one of my real goals is to keep theater in my life.
The theater is where I belonged; I simply wanted to be an actress my whole life.
I just love doing movies that I would want to see in theaters.
I love theater. I also love radio. I love language.
There's certainly nothing lasting and definite about the theater.
People who are interested in the arts and theater are such a minority.
As a kid, I had a background in theater.
For me, I've always wanted to do theater, so I gravitate toward it.
Theater has always been most important to my psyche.
Basically, theater or film is a dangerous industrial environment.
Now in my theater training I showed no aptitude at all.