Isn't there a danger with Tweeting, like drunk dialing? Isn't there a drunk Tweeting danger?
My love life is nobody's business... if I give it to 40 million people to read, what do I have left when I go home? I'm protective of my personal life that way.
I feel responsible that everyone has a really wonderful experience and to do the best work possible, and to always know my lines and to always be on time and to bring a level to the show in terms of quality that other people will follow.
I don't have a lot of stomach for people who don't show up to a set knowing their lines because you're keeping 150 people waiting.
I am a big believer in women's lib, but I love when a man holds a door for me.
I would have gone to law school, or gotten a psychology degree. I wasn't interested in sleeping on a futon forever. And what happened is I walked into auditions, and I had nothing to lose, because I had a backup plan.
I know this is going to sound corny, but I love my life. I love my baby, so I love getting to wake up with him. And I have the most amazing job, with writing that any actor would love and costars who I can't wait to see on Monday mornings. And I love coming home to my husband.
It's one thing in this business to actually work. 5 percent of the Screen Actors' Guild works. It's another thing to do work that's satisfying and that people are loving.
I think that power comes in numbers, and we're in an industry where the actors need to have a bigger voice.
I love being my husband's wife.
I love making money, but you can't live your life waiting to get rich in a job that no longer feeds you artistically.
I think you're much more approachable when you're on a small screen.
I'm a believer in 'Ignorance is bliss.'
I've always had a tomboy quality to me that I embrace and don't run away from. At the same time I'm a real girlie-girl.
The room is full of such talent. It's a beautiful thing about the SAG Awards. It's the most rewarding room to be in as an actor.
I drink too much coffee.
The red carpet is really the only thing that makes me nervous.
I think the whole under-eye-bag thing is hereditary, and I just got lucky.
What I love about what I've been given - and luck has a lot to do with it - is that if you follow your heart you'll wind up doing exactly what you want to do. I was fortunate enough to have enough of a foundation with people behind me to do what was in my heart. And it's all worked out.
If you are on a TV series and you have a hard time disassociating from that character when you get home, your love life is going to suffer, your children are going to suffer, your friends will suffer.
You hear about actors who were doing five years on a series as lovers and actually hated each other. I don't know if I could pull it off.
TV is a much more female-friendly environment.
Roles written for women are so much more complex on television. The film world is becoming quite flimsy for women.
I'm always aware that there's a trick to television to prevent an actor from becoming too lazy. Once you become too familiar with a character, it can stifle the adrenalin from flowing through in the performance.
It's a little bit silly to pit us all against each other as if we were running a race. Just think about the fact that Richard Burton never won an Oscar.