I grew up in a secular suburban Jewish household where we only observed the religion on very specific times like a funeral or a Bar Mitzvah.
Some people are that - more than a parent, more than a role model, more than anything less than a religion.
I think religion is a bunch of hooey, and I think that the holidays are an opportunity for people to get stressed out, getting their rush to shop. It's so conformist.
I don't practise any religion but I am deeply interested in the answers that mankind has come up with to explain the human situation.
I just hate one-dimensional portrayals of religion; it's too cheap and easy to do, and ignores the nuances that go into having a belief system.
In my relationship, I was giving myself away to make the relationship better, but in actuality, wasn't doing better by doing that. I became less of a man.
With Hitchcock I had little relationship. I was called to replace Bernard Herrmann, his favorite composer, in Torn Curtain, after the bitter fight between them.
The special relationship between the region and a regional celebrity means that people feel that they have a special investment in you.
Never dress down for the poor. They won't respect you for it. They want their First Lady to look like a million dollars.
It's too easy to say that orange is happy and black is sad. To me, black is perfect. You can fill it with the emotion you want to express.
I like devilish, thorny, dirty, mean roles, muck and mire, unbelievably sad, unbelievably happy, burdened. Inner conflict - that's where drama is.
They say it's better to bury your sadness in a graveyard or garden that waits for the spring to wake from its sleep and burst into green.
This is going to sound really sad, but I didn't really have any heartthrobs when I was growing up. I was a bit of a geek.
I find it amusing on one level, poignant on another, when people try to get recognition from an outside source. It's sad.
In LA, I mean, here's this place full of desperate and sad people who take their only pleasure from destroying others for the purposes of their own self-aggrandizement.
Homeless people really upset me when I was little. A lot of kids have this reaction, but I would get really worried or sad or concerned or cry.
It's sad that the cell phone is replacing the watch as a time-telling device. I wear a vintage watch that's really skinny.
I'm not normally a jewelry person. I'm supposed to be a working class champion and all, and I don't like to rub my success in people's faces.
The way you can be careful of the catastrophe that success can bring is by paying attention to something else that comes along with success - responsibility.
What I love about London is the energy and the creativity. Culturally, it is such a happening city, from the cuisine to the fashion.
I love attention. Maybe my desire for attention is a little too out of control, but I'm very honest.