I’m an entrepreneur at heart. I’m not afraid of starting up, starting over or even failing for that matter, because the fact that I try new things in itself is a victory.
I'm Irish and Cherokee Indian. I can't faint.
My family are very, very religious in Texas. They're Southern Baptists. I left to go to New York when I was 17 and I realised I wasn't Southern Baptist. That's not how I am inclined.
I feel like part of your job as an actor is you're going to get noticed, and the more successful you get, the more noticed you are. It's kind of like a Catch-22.
I can't really connect with things unless they are spiritual in nature, so I have to make acting spiritual for myself, and each role a spiritual journey for me.
They're really competitive at drama in Texas.
The way that I work is very specific, very thorough, and the process has to be totally clear.
In my career, I've really wanted to sort of be a morpher and not show my own identity.
I'm a trained martial artist. My parents were both martial artists.
I will say that Lynda Carter is an awesome woman.
Every role that you accept makes you grow in some way. It's part of the creative process.
I went to a private school in Singapore and they had an incredible arts program. Every day I was doing something artistic.
I think Andrew Stanton is such an amazing, creative mind.
From the beginning of time, we've told stories, Shamans and Medicine People, and not to be pompous about it, but I feel like that is the lineage I take down and where I come from. There is magic to storytelling.
I've studied astrology for many, many years, and I feel like it's an incredibly challenging art.
The truth for me is that I've been doing independent film since the get-go, so that's a big passion of mine, but the big ones are really fun, too. I like my world to be eclectic.