Every character I play has to be the hero of his own story, the way we’re all heroes of our own lives.
I cried every day of first grade. In class. Which meant I ended up getting comfortable emoting in a place where it wasn’t the norm.
When cellphones came out, my girlfriend refused to get one for five years, because she thought it would turn her into somebody who couldn’t connect with other people – and, of course, she got a cellphone.
No compliment is ever sufficient and every insult, of course, is true.
I have one female fan. But she lives with me. I’m not aware of any others.
I’m not into music – the only music I like is musical theater, but I have every Ween album.
I feel things can always be funny, but that’s probably because I have some kind of leftover childhood need to make people laugh. For somebody like me, that’s the thing you excel at.
Society will decide after the technology is created what we will and won’t accept.
In acting class, you’re trained to express yourself as much as you can.
My hope is to never act again and just do press.
The happiest moments for me, creatively, are doing readings of a play around a table where there’s no audience.