My approach to acting is that I am totally intuitive. I read the script and I get it. If I don't get it, I can't do it.
I seldom get into the mood of the story. It's acting. I go in, I act, I quit. I don't take anything away from it.
As you grow in this business, you learn how to do more with less.
It [love about acting] is all about role playing - the same thing you do when you're a kid, when you play with dolls or toys and make up stories. I never grew out of it.
I like producing but acting is the quintessential me, and I'm probably better at that than I am at anything. My heart has always been in the movies.
I was told that I was good in my dance movement classes and that I should concentrate on dance because it would enhance my ability to get acting work.
Acting means living, it's all I do and all I'm good at. If I weren't getting paid well, I would still be acting in a small troupe somewhere.
Writing I think, out of what all of us do, writing is the hardest. You're the only who start with nothing except what's up here. You do that. It's really hard I think, acting is not.
Acting means living, it's all I do.
Part of acting is having the security to turn yourself loose and let yourself go in order to reach whatever depths a character has. If your guts aren't hanging out there, you don't offer anything.
What do I want to do? Acting wise? Well, there's a western that I want to do. There's a lot of producing that I want to do, projects that I have stacked up that are in my office that I'd like to get done.
I'm not sure that my upbringing has in itself informed my acting choices.
If I wasn't acting, I have no clue what I'd be doing 'cause I have no other talent.