I accept my body. I accept how I am and make the best of what I am given.
If you don’t try at anything, you can’t fail.
I love it when a character requires me to look less than my red-carpet best.
It's funny when someone says to you 'you're hot' and all that, because I don't think of it in that way.
Of course I believe in marriage. Commitment to one other person in life is glorious.
I went up to Meryl Streetp and said 'I love you so much I want to tongue kiss you' And she said 'OK'.
There's more to life than cheek bones.
There are moments to indulge and enjoy, but I always know when it's time to go home and wash my knickers.
There's not an awful lot that embarrasses me. I'm the kind of actress that absolutely believes in exposing myself.
The retouching is excessive. I do not look like that and more importantly, I don't desire to look like that.
I feel very strongly that curves are natural, womanly and real. I shall continue to hope that women are able to believe in themselves for who they are inside, and not feel under such incredible pressure to be unnaturally thin.
God, my brain really goes to mush when I'm pregnant.
I wouldn't be a part of anything that had acts of violence toward children. I don't think I would do a horror film, either. That just doesn't sit well on my soul.
It doesn't make any sense... that's why I trust it!
I was the kid who never won the races. I never jumped the highest. I wasn't on the list of the high-achieving.
Honestly, among my acquaintances there is no woman wearing XS.
The audience's reactions are more important: if people believe in the love story, it's because they love how we've acted. That's the most beautiful award. It's very important for me, people appreciating what I do.
I still don't believe this craziness for being skinny, but I eat sensibly and I don't stuff down chocolate biscuits.
Having children just puts the whole world into perspective. Everything else just disappears.
As a young girl, I never felt attractive. I was fat and unhappy at times, and that kind of thinking stays with you your entire life. There's always going to be a part of me that worries about not looking as slim as other actresses. But at a certain point, when you achieve a lot of your goals and you can be proud of your work, you start to relax more about who you are. And that includes your appearance and self-image - I don't think I look too bad for a mother of two. But women shouldn't have to feel the pressure to compare themselves to actresses or models.
I'm really happy in my own skin. There's a lot of judgment that can come from outside sometimes, and there's media scrutiny that is placed on a lot of women in the public eye, and I just couldn't care less. I really couldn't care less. 'I would sometimes say in my twenties, 'oh, I couldn't care less', but I think I probably did. Now I genuinely don't and that's a lovely, liberating thing to experience.
I look like people that walk down the street. I don't have perfect boobs, I don't have zero cellulite - of course I don't - and I'm curvy. If that is something that makes women feel empowered in any way, that's great.
My husband is not a jealous person in any way.
I am insecure. If you ask me, everybody is.
I'm often moved by the circumstances around some of my characters, but I don't think I've actually cried watching myself.