The muscles you flex in theater are muscles that you really need. I must always find a way to get back there. It's irreplaceable.
Charity in the theater begins and ends with those who have a play opening within a week of one's own.
Your mind just goes to the craziest idea to lure people into the theater, and then you write your script around those elements.
In the theater, everything is ephemeral. Everything is almost weightless and without a very clear definition of how you made it.
I grew up in a town where there were no galleries, no museums, no theaters - a very religious, ultraconservative community.
I had no idea I was going to have a career in the theater. I did not plan it.
I started selling out comedy clubs before I got to town with no advertising. I was selling out theaters just on the rumor that I was going to be there.
Combining music, theater and comedy is a new and broader form of expression. In certain combinations you can make people laugh one moment, cry the next, and then be astounded by the beauty of the music.
There's always something more to be accomplished with a character. Theater is a human experience. There's nothing shellacked or finished off about it. I guess that's why it always draws me back.
I always find that really interesting, you know, when I get to see characters that I love in TV and film and theater around their family.
I've always had not just an affection but a real love for the theater family in New York, and I really feel it is a family. I'm so touched by the generosity of everyone there.
Nobody has yet proven that taking a chance and doing something unique that an audience isn't used to is a bad idea. What the theater lacks is that kind of courage.
When I'm on stage, I feel very much at home - within a theater, within an ensemble - so this entire process is something I feel very attuned with.
I think now that the great thing is not so much the formulation of an answer for myself, for the theater, or the play-but rather the most accurate possible statement of the problem.
I'm a total theater junkie - whether I'm working on a stage or sitting in a seat. I am always looking for a great play and a great part to do.
I prefer theater and film. I did a little television, and obviously I'm not knocking it. It can be great, and it does pay the bills. But it's a little bit more disjointed.
The great actors we had came from the actor-manager theaters. Not only did they create a team, they were the generals working with the soldiers.
Any show that's bringing in a young audience is doing a good thing, because that's the only way that theater will continue to grow. All the other audience members are going to be dead soon!
In theater and dance, I was trying to win someone's approval, trying to get in, trying to be good. It felt out of my control, whereas music suddenly felt like this free expression. It was fun.
There are times in my 30 years in the theater that I have come perilously close to losing faith in the one form of action I have in this life.
I moved to New York to do theater, and I got cast in a play that was funny, and then I was the funny guy. I did a movie that was funny, and then I was the funny guy.