Frances Stevens: Mother, the book you're reading is upside down!
Frances Stevens: I bet you told her all your trees are sequoias.
Steven Connolly: You're beautiful, Miss. Ya don't know how beautiful ya are!
People look at me, and they go, 'You're white, you're smart, you must have went to college. You must have grown up with money.'
I just want choices. It's not about making money and having a lot of friends in Hollywood; that's the last thing I want.
It was in England that I discovered theatre. I didn't have any money, but I would just eat yoghurt in order to get some money for tickets.
You can't make money on Broadway. You make nothing. You maybe make like $1,350 a week after you pay out all the producers.
I was associated with a woman who I was involved with and had a relationship with. She asked for money. I felt as though I was being blackmailed or there was some sort of extortion.
I don't want the money. I don't want the drama. I just want to do my show. I want to have fun again.
In a couple of years, the Chinese will be seen as regular participants in international industry. Their companies have to report to shareholders as well as to the Chinese authorities. They need to make money, they have to be efficient.
I grew up with no money. No money. I always struggled and had the sense that there was this other class of people who went to college - this was when I was younger.
Working on films where the money's more important than the creativity, I just get a bit freaked out by that. I just don't feel comfortable.
People think that celebs make a lot more money than we do. We look for bargains and we do a lot of stuff on our own.
There's a wealth gap that is happening, and that is all over the world, you know? The rich are getting richer and holding a higher percentage of money or wealth that's out there.
You cannot reduce the power of story with the tag of money because it's not a share market. So you must know the seriousness of the power of storytelling.
Today you can go to a gas station and find the cash register open and the toilets locked. They must think toilet paper is worth more than money.
I'd rather be useful than rich. It's more essential to feel you're doing something that's worth doing, rather than making a lot of money.
I loved New York. I made enough money and studied acting with Kenneth McMillan, which was my first formal training.
I like the intimacy of independent films and I like the idea that people aren't being paid necessarily as much money as some one on a studio film.
Marketers are out there trying to figure out how to get your money out of your child.
At fifteen one is first beginning to realize that everything isn't money and power in this world, and is casting about for joys that do not turn to dross in one's hands.