I'm an artist, and the need to get inside myself and be creative and be other people is a part of who I am. I don't imagine I'll abandon that completely.
Women were real box office stars in the '40s, more so than men. People loved to see women's films. I think it was better then, except for the studio system.
When you're so out there in the public eye, people are constantly criticizing every aspect about you.
There's something that sort of weirds me out about actors who want to be rock stars, and the other way around too.
Sometimes when things you love get really commercial, you end up feeling betrayed by it.
Our marriage is between us. If we decide to continue being together or not, it's our business.
My playground was the theatre. I'd sit and watch my mother pretend for a living. As a young girl, that's pretty seductive.
My life comes down to three moments: the death of my father, meeting my husband, and the birth of my daughter. Everything I did previous to that just doesn't seem to add up to very much.
My dad always said he couldn't remember a time when I did not want to act.
It's a waste of time for people to say things they think other people want to hear, or try and come off in a certain way. I try to be as honest as I can.
I've had a very interesting career. I get to do amazing things and work with amazing people and travel and learn languages - things most people don't get the opportunity to do.
It changed me more than anything else. You don't want to get to that place where you're the adult and you're palpably in the next generation. And, this shoved me into that.
We feel it's unacceptable to be fat, when it has nothing to do with who the person actually is.
In the theater, you go from point A to point Z, building your performance as the evening progresses. You have to relinquish that control on a film.
If we were living in ancient Rome or Greece, I would be considered sickly and unattractive. The times dictate that thin is better for some strange reason, which I think is foolish.