I considered myself very lucky after 'Baghdad Cafe,' and I have 'The Shield.' In every genre, I've kicked butt at some point. I'm real happy.
I consider myself a moderate Republican. I have very, very moderate social views, and I'm pretty strong on, on defense matters.
I think of myself as kind of a hippy. Everyone around me says that's not the impression they get. They think I'm sassy. Apparently, I think I'm nicer than I really am.
In the early days, I often felt that I was taking a math test when we were playing. It was a profound feeling of having to prove myself.
Yes, I'm a New Yorker, born and bred. While I'm not quite the L.A. snob that Woody Allen is, I do find myself happier in New York.
I've purged myself of worldly goods; half my stuff is either being sold or going to charity. I need to go shopping.
When I'm working I don't have room to think about myself and my own issues. It's really freeing. There is no room for me, which is really nice.
I always want to look like myself - that's key for me. I don't want to look like a different person, I don't want my face frozen.
I'm looking for one of two things and sometimes they dovetail: I'm looking to go into a theatre and see a certain kind of show. And if it's not there, I'd like to do it myself so it would be there.
Believe it or not, most people think of me as a recording artist, but actually the way I think of myself and the way I earn my living is as a performing artist.
Every summer, around late July and into August, I find myself in Europe, performing at any festival that will have me.
I try to get myself up and moving as early as possible. Optimum is to be on the treadmill while it is still dark outside.
I did feel pressure to look a certain way on 'Hollyoaks.' But I just had to stay strong and not let myself get into a state of mind that isn't healthy.
If I seem to boast more than is becoming, my excuse is that I brag for humanity rather than for myself.
I always wonder why birds stay in the same place when they can fly anywhere on the earth. Then I ask myself the same question.
I never thought of myself in comedy at all... I loved going to the theatre and seeing people wearing beautiful clothes come down the staircase and start to dance.
The public figure of the writer, the writer-character, the 'personality-cult' of the author, are all becoming for me more and more intolerable in others, and consequently in myself.
i remind myself every morning, commitment is a big part of trustworthy, what i am and what i believe
There's always hurdles. So I just keep moving, just constantly redefining myself. That's how you stay in the race.
I used to comfort myself when I became an actor that it was a useful job, entertaining people. And it was important to do it as well as you possibly can.
I'm more comfortable revealing myself than hiding behind metaphors. I respond to artists who reveal something of themselves.