When I go home, I play with my baby dolls and strollers and stuffed animals, pretend like they're real dogs.
I come from an army background, and everyone at my home has a habit of getting up early. I continue this habit even today.
It's nice to have some continuity you can come back to. I feel that in coming home, coming back to London.
We don't leave home without my daughter's doll La-La. She looks like a bit of a rag, but India is obsessed with her.
If you're missing three or four limbs, you have special challenges going forward. And the last thing you want is to not be independent in your home.
I ask myself: Would I have been any worse off if I had stayed home or lived on a farm instead of shock treatments and medication?
At home I have a Tibetan terrier. I'm still not sure if he's a genius or very thick. It's a fine line.
Plus, teaching brings home to you very fast that you actually know nothing. I didn't realize that before.
It was an outdoor Shakespeare theater that I grew up at. That feels like home, and the place I'm always trying to figure out how to get to.
I feel like I'm working on an oil rig right now. I'm away from home a lot.
I'm purely most happy on a film or television set. That's where I feel I am home.
I'm not squeamish at all. As a child I dragged a dead squirrel home on my skateboard and cut it open and tried to look at its brain.
I'm too nervous to eat before I go onstage, and I'll usually eat out after the performance or when I get home at midnight.
When I'm in the movie, I'm entirely in the movie. When I'm on the set, I'm 200 per cent there; when I'm at home, I'm 200 per cent at home.
One of the main uses of a home is to stay in it, when one is too weak and spiritless for conforming, without effort, to the ways of other houses.
I feel very at home in an empty church. I feel the most protected. It's very mystical.
When I'm at home, I want to be a normal person. I don't want to hear, 'Can I have your autograph?'
I did my New York debut at 21. It was 'On the Town' at the George Gershwin Theatre. New York is my artistic home.
When I'm back home in Chicago, since 'Roseanne' was such a Midwestern, blue-collar show, that's what sticks out in people's minds.
There are plenty of easy things that you can do from the comfort of your own home to get you started on the path of giving back.
Let's be honest: we all watch the show at home and play 'armchair' 'Survivor,' inserting our opinions, comments and yelling at the TV screen.