It's fun once in a while to do a serious part but I really enjoy doing comedy because I love to laugh.
I love bouncing between different genres. And comedy, obviously, is something I enjoy doing the most and I've had the most success with. But I'm open to all jobs and all genres.
I would love to do a dramatic comedy. All of that, it all interests me. At some point I want to do my 'Monster,' like Charlize Theron, so I'm buckling up for that.
I love doing comedy. Absolutely love it. After 'Wedding Crashers,' people suddenly realized that it was something I could do.
I've seen too many comics who got their own shows and were undone because they worked for an executive producer who didn't understand their comedy or their sensibility.
I think that in any role you have, whether TV or film, it's hard to do comedy and drama within one story.
If I had to perform in a comedy club I would bomb; I would be trying too hard.
I really enjoy playing that everyman part because that part is us, the audience. And you need somebody inside a comedy to tether the absurdity to reality.
Going to Catholic school was what fueled me into comedy. The nuns were so brutal so I used to try to make my friends laugh.
When you do comedy, you can't please the world, although I'd like to think that most of my audiences were on my side.
I would recommend that anyone who wants to do comedy on TV to do radio first.
'The Simpsons' is like Charlie Parker or Marlon Brando or Richard Pryor: Comedy couldn't go back to the way it was after 'The Simpsons' came out.
The one thing about comedy, making it become a part of you, the audience loves it, because you become part of them.
I've introduced myself with comedy, and once you've introduced yourself as something, that's where people keep you. That's where people like to hold you.
I have yet to see one of those Comedy Central shows with multiple standup comics that doesn't include someone the size of the Hindenburg.
Journalism is straying into entertainment. The lines between serious news segments, news entertainment, and news comedy are blurring.
The person I have admired the most in comedy terms would be Eric Morecambe, who is my total hero.
Comedy and tragedy are two sides of the same coin. A talent in one area might also lead to a predisposition in the other.
In comedy, something may be more absurd, but you have to believe just as much as you do when you're doing drama.
Especially while television I think is going through some growing pains or is in need of - I think current comedy is a bit, uh, not happening, you know?
You can't get all of your news from Jon Stewart, especially since it's a comedy show.