That's the kind of musical freedom I like: jazz, rock, blues, anything. You adopt different attitudes when you play different music.
At the heart of the failure of most plays is the inability to carry on a thoughtful conversation about your work with yourself.
My father had a dairy farm. He employed three black families and one white family, and I used to play with black children.
Plays are always about intense relationships, whether they're intense love relationships or family relationships or existential relationships.
My family took me to church when I was like 4 years old, and I had to be in a pageant, and I was playing Jesus.
There wasn't anyone in my family who was involved in the theatre. I saw a few amateur plays when I was growing up, but I can't think of anything that happened or anybody in particular who inspired me; it all came from within.
I like playing music because it's a good living and I get satisfaction from it. But I can't feed my family with satisfaction.
Drag racing has played a big role in In-N-Out's history, and it is also an important part of my family history.
Evening the playing field for women workers is a matter of fairness and with women now providing a significant share of their family's income, it is a family issue.
I never play golf because it takes too long, and the business connections it produces can be made just as easily over an early breakfast.
If you can play live and support yourself, it's one of the few ways you're going to actually get paid in this business these days.
Radio is a really strange business now, too. There's a very narrow door and a very few people control what gets played.
I gave up lots of things I love doing: writing, and business, and playing the piano and so on.
My family had a business where they worked with gravestones, and I remember growing up and playing in cemeteries like it was a normal playground.
Cowardice and courage are never without a measure of affectation. Nor is love. Feelings are never true. They play with their mirrors.
It requires greater courage to preserve inner freedom, to move on in one's inward journey into new realms, than to stand defiantly for outer freedom. It is often easier to play the martyr, as it is to be rash in battle.
There are a lot of guys who play in the NBA. There aren't a lot of guys who have a chance to win a gold medal, too.
I love to play things that are out-of-the-box. It's just that I don't always get the chance to do it!
Whatever character you play, it gives you the chance to expose another side of yourself that maybe you've never felt comfortable with, or never knew about.
I'm only 35, and I felt that the time was right to try to come back and have a chance for him to see me play.
I think it's easy to enjoy anywhere that you play where you feel like you got a chance to win a lot.