If you look at my carpet photos, I'm doing the exact same pose all the way down the carpet - like, I literally shuffle in that pose.
I'm fundamentally a positive person. Otherwise, I wouldn't be doing some of the insane movies that I do.
I love my lifestyle now, but at the end of nine months, you're toast. You are toast. It's like running a marathon. You can't think while you're doing it. Especially when different directors come in who are not part of the posse, the circle.
Happiness is found in doing, not merely possessing.
I'm always mystified by the day-to-day workings of entities like Twitter that provide framework but not content, but I suppose it could be compared to the U.S. Postal Service, which manages to keep a lot of people employed doing lots of stuff other than writing letters.
I think it better to do right, even if we suffer in so doing, than to incur the reproach of our consciences and posterity.
I wouldn't be posting videos of me in drag or doing a remake of Zoolander's orange mocha frappuccino scene if I didn't still like attention.
I'm as happy doing 'Postman Pat' as I am doing 'Hamlet.'
With both kids, I started working out again at 16 days postpartum, but I treated myself with kindness, doing mild workouts, because my fitness level was lower.
I'm like any other girl: I see the Instagram posts and the Tumblr stuff. I'm inspired by what my fellow girls are doing.
Journalists like to say I started off sweeping the pottery floors. But it was just a short-lived part time job doing that after I left school.
The advantage of doing one's praising for oneself is that one can lay it on so thick and exactly in the right places.
If you're a kid at a secondary comprehensive in North London as I was in the seventies, prancing around doing acting and being a luvvie wasn't really a good idea for your personal security.
I came to New York and started doing stand-up and improv, and started auditioning for commercials and voiceovers and stuff. My first job was on a pilot of that prank show called 'Boiling Points' on MTV.
I ended up doing a lot of prank shows in my life or prank theater, but I always got fairly nervous about doing 'em.
I've been doing pranks my whole life, so I guess I'm pretty good at it.
I'm always trying to play pranks on people and doing silliness, singing extremely badly and extremely loudly on set.
These days, as I am older and wiser, I realize that there is a danger in becoming an icon, as people can see you as remote and untouchable, and they are less willing to tolerate you doing things that don't fit with their preconceived idea of you.
Nothing I'm doing is without its predecessors.
Until computers and robots make quantum advances, they basically remain adding machines: capable only of doing things in which all the variables are controlled and predictable.