English television from the Fifties to the Nineties was the least bad in the world, and now it's just as bad as it is anywhere.
At thirteen I began modeling, doing my first television commercial in ninth grade for Pizza Hut.
I used to act in television commercials when I was a kid and a young adult.
You know, I grew up watching all kinds of films. So, as an adult, I wanted to be involved in all kinds of plays and television and film.
The movie, if I recall, didn't have to do with the television show because there were concerns from everyone that they didn't want it to be like the TV show.
I watch golf on television, although I don't golf - except for visits to the driving range in spurts.
Oddly enough, I have really bad stage fright - getting up in front of people. And I made a living going on live television.
Sci-fi fans really have a commitment to the characters even as much as the actors do. There's a synergy between making television and who gets to watch it.
What you need to know about me is that I always just wanted to be a country singer. I didn't choose the path of television or being on magazine covers.
I've done a lot of television, and there's no rehearsal process - you have to come to the set with your guns blazing and with a point of view.
It was considered that you were stepping down by doing television. I almost turned Cybill down because I so wanted to remain a theater actress.
If you know me, you know that nothing embarrasses me. Anything could happen to me on live television, and I sincerely don't care.
Cricket cannot afford to throw up meaningless games before its benefactors, which is what spectators and television audiences are.
I feel like sometimes people on television shows can start taking things for granted, or they don't want to be here or something like that.
The idea of stardom was difficult to grasp. It was like being schizophrenic; there was her, the woman on television, and the real me.
I did a lot of ridiculous television. Between 1980 and '85 I had no confidence, so I did everything I was told to do.
I had no television when I was little, just a stack of old, beat-up comics from the 1950s and 1960s.
Especially while television I think is going through some growing pains or is in need of - I think current comedy is a bit, uh, not happening, you know?
Reading the Gospels, without the personality of Jesus, is like watching television with the sound turned off.
I've been on the wrong end of violence, and I've done violence myself... I refuse to glorify violence in my movie and television roles.
Growing up where I did, the thought of working on a television show or in a movie... that existed on a parallel plane, you know?