I grew up in a home and in a world in which you can do anything. We were all expected to go to college. My father was a doctor.
I want to see gay couples stuck with their significant other at Home Depot with that far away look in their eye, get me out of here.
I feel like you learn how to do school in second grade through fifth grade. During those years, I was never home.
I have a three-year-old and a four-year-old at home, and my mornings are about just dealing with the fact of that. I oddly enjoy it.
Stand-up is like a movie every night. You write it, direct it, produce it, the audience votes, and you go home. There's nothing more satisfying.
I didn't grow up in a home that glorified Hollywood. We didn't watch TV. We didn't have a lot of magazines around.
Just because I managed to do a little something, I don't want anyone back home to think I got the big head.
The darker, more complex and emotional the part is, the easier it is for me. But I don't take any of that stuff home with me at the end of the day.
At home, a T-shirt and something loose like harem pants would do. If I'm stepping out, a pair of blue jeans and a white tee are just fine.
Anybody that wants to walk out that door and leave home for a few months and rely on themselves instead of fate might have some interesting stories to tell.
You want to come home to a nice firm bed with the corners tucked in so you start over, like each night is like a new night.
Apart from anything else, I find boots are too hot except in wintry weather. At home I usually wear a sweater, shirt and slacks.
I don't have a formal home recording studio, but I can record tracks on my computer upstairs in my office.
After filming I like to go home and lie down with my daughter and have a glass of wine so I don't really socialize with the other actors.
This is my home. Home is where the disease is. As long as I stay in America, I'll never run out of subjects for songs.
I live in New York City, so there's so much stimulation when you walk outside, it does not require a television in the home.
I'm an actor... I do a job and I go home. Why are you interested in me? You don't ask a truck driver about his job.
For my senior year, I'm home schooled. It's working well with the acting. Juggling school with the acting is hard, but you know, what can you do?
You're in front of an audience, but you're playing for a camera. There's this huge adrenaline rush, because you know that besides the audience in the studio, there are millions of people watching at home.
London is my home... I know what's right and wrong here, and it's nice to have somewhere familiar to go back to.
I would like to explore comedy more. It's not something that I've done a lot of. Obviously, I'm very at home in drama. I like everything.