This is not about abortion or the antics. This is about pro choice versus anti-choice and government intervention in a woman's personal decisions about her life.
I am certainly a liberal.
I never took to Hollywood.
I never feel more alive than when I'm on stage. On film you feel chopped up, you can be acting from the neck up, or the hand, there is a lot of close up.
I know there are nights when I have power, when I could put on something and walk in somewhere, and if there is a man who doesn't look at me, it's because he's gay.
I have no desire to play most of the roles being offered.
I have health. I have a wonderful support system. I have the admiration of millions of strangers, which I do not underestimate.
I have a brother who's a psychologist. He says three-quarters of the world are born feeling that they will be affected by the world; one quarter are born knowing that they will affect the world.
I had a great deal of pressure to move to LA after Romancing the Stone came out and I'd become very popular. But people came to me anyway.
I find the idea of today's icons being teenagers incredibly uninspiring.
I figured as I got older, the good roles for women would be in the theatre. So 15 years ago I started building a Broadway career to try and develop the chops to be accepted as a great theatrical actress.
I often play women who are not essentially good or likable, and I often go through a stage where I hate them. Then I end up loving and defending them.
As I traveled from one country to another, no one knew anything about me. So I could be anybody, I could speak as I wished, act as I wished, dress as I wished.
I always thought the point was to have a bigger life, to meet more people. So I don't understand Hollywood.
Get more women producers, writers, directors. Why should we expect men to do it for us? They can't.