I don't have some sort of moral dilemma with coming as a guest to an event or a fashion show.
When I did Comic Relief, I did it to be on the show; it's a badge of honor as a comedian to do that show.
My version of a stress dream is, really, showing up on a concert stage with a drum set and not knowing the chart.
Wendy Hood: I'll show you mine if you show me yours.
I love when people in culture show up on fictional TV shows. I don't mind at all being a name from the '90s.
I probably would be continuing to do voice-overs, continuing to do cartoon shows, and at the same time I'd probably be on a sitcom or a dramatic television show.
No, every album is something like a snapshot. It only shows one moment in time. It shows what we feel and think right at that point in time, nothing more and nothing less.
My favorite television show of all time is 'Hill Street Blues.' I think it's the show that is to television what Pele was to football or Muhammad Ali was to boxing.
'The Office' is clearly the funniest show on TV. But I can't live without watching 'Eureka.' It's my favorite show of all time, and I watch it constantly on my iPod.
Most people think of cinematographers as choosing subjects of an epic nature to show off what they do - big, sweeping images of war or pageantry.
A hit show takes Hollywood magic indeed, but it also takes a lot of math and science, plus the study of polls and trends to make and sell a TV show.
Also, if I did join another show, I'd end up burning my bridges to the show I love most.
Love doesn't always show us the sad and the sorrowful part of it, it only shows us the happy circle a gain and a gain.
To me if you're going have a show, it should be a show. It should be entertaining and take you on a journey.
I start the show, and the armour goes on, and the showman comes out. When the show is finished, that comes off, and I become soft centred again.
I've always had a show that went seven episodes or 13 episodes or whatever. And I've never had a show that's gone past a first season. It really is a lot of work.
I wish it was possible to do the work and not have to talk about it, but it is traditional in the theater to go into the village square and bang the drum and say, 'Come see this show, come see this show.'
The reality is I'm not this person with this driving 'get it done' attitude.
Wisdom may best arise from a humbling reality.
No authority is higher than reality.
The only reality of the theater exists in the mind of the audience.