I like being married, but it was never something I felt I had to do.
I think that the Japanese culture is one of the very few cultures left that is its own entity. They're just so traditional and so specific in their ways. It's kind of untouched, it's not Americanized.
I'm glad that it was so physical and so isolated
Also, I think having a musicality about me, that helps in identifying different things in languages and getting them right.
I kind of realized I could sing, so I played around with that for a while. And that led me to acting in itself, which I came more passionate about by the age of 15.
I don't mind where I work, it's really nice to be able to travel around and taste the flavours of different countries.
I grew up watching a lot of American television and so the American sound has been in my psyche somehow for a long time and is quite familiar and so that does make it easier.
It's strange, because it seems that society is kind of promoting or nurturing this kind of ostracized existence. People are kind of very much in their own little worlds.
I have never witnessed poverty like I did in Haiti. The kind that is so deep and wide-reaching that it feels impossible to make a difference. But I found that lives can and are being changed. It may take a lot of work and time but Concern has, and continues to make, serious progress because they stayed long after the world moved on.
I love kids, so working with them wasn't a problem.
Sometimes it was so quiet, its frightening. It really prioritizes things.