Yes, I loved MASH. As we are sitting here now talking, it's playing somewhere in the world.
Everyone who watches me play knows I am an honest player.
I'm not interested in playing the girl that's just there to make the guy, you know, give him a talking to.
I started out in Scotland, not as a footballer of any note, and I didn't play to draw the attention of people abroad.
You write a hit play the same way you write a flop
Being in the stands is very difficult. I was never playing but I am nervous watching, waiting.
You could go to Estonia and there's probably an episode of 'Seinfeld' playing there. Television is a very powerful thing.
I have a ship's bed, which totally plays to my obsession of, if I were not an actress, I would be a pirate.
Part of the work is determining through what instrument you are playing. Actors are physical, olympian storytellers and we should be able to create entire landscapes with nothing.
I don't like playing standards. I like to do my own cutting edge work.
Acting's all about stepping out of the box, so I don't want to go to work every day and play Cassie Scerbo at all.
I play a curator, the most American part you can think of. My work is to protect the Declaration of Independence. I work at the National Archives in Washington.
The social world is transforming the way we create wealth, work, learn, play, raise our children, and probably the way we think.
Normally, an actress has to work to bring out her male side. In our case, the dynamic is reversed. The actor playing her modelled himself on Sharon Stone.
The work my mum does, a lot of it is re-housing homeless people, that's a real job. I play make-believe and dressing up for a living!
Award trophies, as opposed to letting the players define and claim their own. Ultimately, pay them to play so that their activity not only resembles work but is work.
You've got to stay focused without being boring - because all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy. Skinny, but dull.
You work your butt off and somebody says you can't have your record played because it offends them. Tyrants are made of such stuff.
I try to avoid a specific image. I seek to play as many different women as I can to avoid having a label put on me.
I think it's so wrong to play the victim. There's too many brave women out there that just won't even tolerate it, you know?
I started writing because I got so frustrated that there weren't enough plays that had roles for young black women in them.