I left Indiana, and I ain't been back since. I've been doing comedy and paying my bills.
They have what you call a black night where they have black people come in for just one night only to watch comedy, and you get all your local drug dealers, thugs, prostitutes, all of them come in, sit down, and listen to you tell jokes. They the hardest people to make laugh.
I have an Italian comedy at the Venice Film Festival.
Comedy. I think that's something I'd really like to do.
You don't get a chance to take a breath but when you do, you have some really good comedy moments that ease up on the tension that the movie is centered around which is Kim being kidnapped and her son and husband being kidnapped and the jeopardy that they're in.
You're at the top of your game if you do comedy.
I think you can tell the human condition better through comedy.
Especially while television I think is going through some growing pains or is in need of - I think current comedy is a bit, uh, not happening, you know?
It proved to me, though, that comedy is so much harder.
Comedy is much more challenging, because you have to have the same level of belief but you have to make people laugh, and that's definitely a challenge.
I'll probably stick to comedy for the time being. I mean, a great piece of work is a great piece of work, and I'm up for good work anytime. But I do love comedy!
I loved that about her because I knew it would open the door for a lot of comedy, because I knew that the conflict would come, because not many people live like the way she does.
In comedy, something may be more absurd, but you have to believe just as much as you do when you're doing drama.
I love doing comedy - I get a laugh out of it, it's not so serious.
I enjoy doing everything, comedy and drama. I just look for the characters really and what they offer.