I was so honored to be on 'Entourage' for eight years but I want to show people that I can do other things.
The ideal, it seems to me, is to show things happening and allow the reader to decide what they mean.
Don't hide yourself. Stand up, keep your head high and show them what you got!
Tell me and I forget. Show me and I remember. Involve me and I understand.
I was the boy who liked to sing his own songs at talent shows, and I was suddenly officially uncool.
A lot of people don't know this, but when 'Dancing with the Stars' first asked me to be on the show, I said no, because I wanted to act and to be taken seriously.
I always thought, if you're gonna do TV, you want to play a straight, solid, pillar-of-the-show kind of guy.
I'm very smart when it comes to choosing dancers and trying to show the world that there's a whole lot of dancing going on.
It takes a lot out of you to do a one-hour episodic lead of a show. I don't think actors realize that when they take the job.
I would do anything to keep looking the job. I think you make an extra effort if you're on show.
During a big rock show, you can flub a few things and nobody will hear it, because it gets buried under everything else.
It's important to me that I look good on television because, let's face it, I'm single, and you want somebody to watch the show and fall in love with you.
I've been very fortunate to be able to use my series as a platform to show a good message for the kids.
Let us show our fellow countrymen and the entire world what the Germans can do when they work for peace.
Mae: Show 'em your friendly, Honey! Let 'em sniff your hand
With theater, depending on the audience, the show is different every night and really requires your constant concentration. With film, it's more possible to focus for shorter, more intense bits of time.
I was very friendly with Jimi Hendrix because my boyfriend at the time, Tommy Weber, was making a film about him, so I would go to all of his shows.
In theater, the show must go on, so you train yourself to be able to nail it every single time because that's what the audience deserves, and that's the magic of live theater.
My first job was singing on the Cas Walker radio show in Knoxville, Tennessee. I was about 10 years old, and I thought it was big time.
The Doctor' is the kind of character - because the guest cast is changing all the time, there are very few constants in the show, so the 'Doctor'- when you're there, you're in it a lot. You're speaking a lot.
For a long time, my shows were about people walking out or about getting my gigs canceled or having the presenter not wanting to pay me.