I'd love to be in a 1910s film - the era between the corsets and losing the corsets.
It's important to have masculine energy around your child.
I believe it is my duty as a performer to raise issues in the world of things we're afraid to look at.
We're all living blinkered lives, and we're not seeing what's going on and looking to change it. I'm not saying that everyone has to make a political statement, but we need to be more aware of what's happening and why.
I think there's a very fine line between the type of performing that some actors do, and being in a state in your mind where you actually believe what's going on. If we weren't actors, what would we do with that ability? Would we not be slightly insane? Mentally ill? I don't know.
Coming back into television, I was very, very wary about committing to anything that could potentially take a long time. I don't mind movies, but I was nervous of television.
I don't get the point in a lot of biopics, they're boring. You know what's gonna happen. You're just watching actors show off.
When I was 16, nobody else talked like me. Nobody else sounded like me.
Humour very often consists of shrewd perceptions about people. It's usually fun at someone's expense. Nowadays if you're funny at anybody's expense they run to the UN and say, "I must have an ombudsman to protect me. " You hardly dare have a shrewd perception about anybody.
Women need space and silence. We too quickly give away our energy. There's something about holding that richness.
A study of over 10,000 patients shows clearly that chemo's supposedly strong track record with Hodgkin's disease (lymphoma) is actually a lie. Patients who underwent chemo were 14 times more likely to develop leukemia and 6 times more likely to develop cancers of the bones, joints, and soft tissues than those patients who did not undergo chemotherapy.