Being beautiful isn't everything... Sometimes it's interesting to show how you feel on the inside on the outside, just through expressing yourself.
You want a place where you can say that this is your show that you invested in with other actors, but there's also that flexibility of being a recurring actor.
When you're born you get a ticket to the freak show. When you're born in America, you get a front row seat.
If we are now holding late-night talk-show hosts to the same moral accountability as we hold politicians or clergymen, I'm out. I'm gone.
On 'Undeclared,' I was actually the only person who had gone to college. Here we are doing this college show, and no one had actually really been, and it was so bizarre to me.
Ranger fans, they're expecting you to win, so you really want to show up every day.
I'm currently doing Undeclared an American TV show set in a college. It just got aired and got massive ratings so hopefully that'll screen in the UK soon.
The Koran shows every sign of being thrown together by human beings, as do all the other holy books.
On our show, I've only reached out and touched about 55 guys. I think there's still about 40 million.
We tell stories. We talk about statistics. And in 1978, we added an element of the show that gave it its heartbeat: the long distance dedication.
I get asked a lot what the key is to creating a hit show, and I have a standard answer: Do everything right, and then get lucky 10 ways.
I don't commit to things unless I have my A-team to do it. And I'm not trying to be cocky, but that shows in my productions. They are top notch!
It is a different genre - a show about something other than doctors, lawyers and cops. Teachers are something completely different. I think it makes for very interesting television.
I was always bossy as a kid. I made my friends do shows that I wrote and would take them on tour from house to house.
By my third year of Law and Order, I was climbing the walls. But you don't leave a hit show, especially when you have a five-year contract.
In the '80s, I was the only one who didn't watch the shows about teenagers. I had to go over to friends' houses to see them. I still don't have a TV!
The most important thing is posture: when you get old, it's the way you walk, the way you stand, that shows it.
When I die, it's going to read, 'Game Show Fixture Passes Away.' Nothing about the theater, or Tony Awards, or Emmys. But it doesn't bother me.
Show me another pleasure like dinner which comes every day and lasts an hour.
I swear if I had to do this over again, I would just do the paintings and never show them.
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.