[Drunk, singing] Samir: Back up in your ass with the resurrection.
Max Bialystock: Shut up, I'm having a rhetorical conversation.
John Cleese once told me he'd do anything for money. So I offered him a pound to shut up, and he took it.
When you're making an independent film what you don't have in time and money you have to make up with creativity and diligence.
When our time's up, it's up. All the money in the world won't buy you one more day.
I want to branch out. I want to write. I write poetry. I want to see my children grow up well.
I was trained as an actress. But I wasn't a very convincing actress, so I started doing punk poetry and then fell into doing stand-up.
And how can poetry stand up against its new conditions? Its position is perfectly precarious.
My greatest environments in which I can grow, or grow up, is in personal romantic relationships with a man.
Growing up, a film was an action film or it was a comedy or it was romantic, but you don't really see such stark lines between genres nowadays.
I was a bit of an introvert growing up, and I tended to do better in math and science at school, so I went with it.
This is going to sound really sad, but I didn't really have any heartthrobs when I was growing up. I was a bit of a geek.
I was on the snowboard team at my school, but that was the only sports team I was on. I played soccer growing up in elementary school.
I'm an English boy. I played a lot of sports growing up, but I never had any kind of workout regimen.
I had no doubts I could go to the pole. I may not be as strong, but I make up for physical strength in other areas, like steadiness and not panicking under stress.
The turning point in the process of growing up is when you discover the core of strength within you that survives all hurt.
The secret of our success is that we never, never give up.
I love dressing up in superhero outfits and in fact, when I dress up as Wonder Woman, I actually think that I'm more powerful.
I love the idea of waking up to a song. It could be any song.
In the early Seventies, I had shoulder-length hair, bell-bottom pants, love beads and shirts that laced up at the front. But then I smartened up.
As I grow up, the lessons I learn in love and relationships and how we treat each other are hopefully maturing - hopefully.