I don't really worry about being typecast much. I mean, everyone in Hollywood is typecast to a degree.
“I don't really worry about being typecast much. I mean, everyone in Hollywood is typecast to a degree.”
The World Motivation
I don't really worry about being typecast much. I mean, everyone in Hollywood is typecast to a degree.
“I don't really worry about being typecast much. I mean, everyone in Hollywood is typecast to a degree.”
I don't really worry about being typecast much. I mean, everyone in Hollywood is typecast to a degree.
But the way that we've got it organized in our family, we try not to work at the same time, so I'm just now starting to look around. I think I'd like to do a film.
The only way to silence a room that's laughing at you is to sort of take over.
I always think change is important in a character. The most dynamic choices that you can make for a character are always the best ones.
Four hours of makeup, and then an hour to take it off. It's tiring. I go in, I get picked up at two-thirty in the morning, I get there at three. I wait four hours, go through it, ready to work at seven, work all day long for twelve hours, and get it taken off for an hours, go home and go to sleep, and do the same thing again.
The degree of one's emotions varies inversely with one's knowledge of the facts.
I see the Jedi mission as giving up a normal life in exchange for protecting the innocent. It's a life of sacrifice. There are rewards, but also a certain degree of sterility.
The loans I took out for my undergraduate degree were manageable. But my legal education was more expensive, and I paid for it almost entirely through public and private loans.
I got a degree in math, from not a good school in Texas, and then I went to work as a software engineer. Just not glamorous at all.
In healthcare like in government generally, people are incentivised to engage in wasteful/dangerous signalling to a terrifying degree - not rigorous thinking and not solving problems.