Since I have fair skin, I have to stay out of the sun. I can’t stand the sun. I dyed my hair red for a while during the 1990s but I’m actually a natural blonde.
I never knew I’d be in a musical, let alone win an award for one.
I just want to be nominated; beggars can’t be choosers.
I have a different approach. I don’t file lawsuits because I really don’t care.
I find standing and posing for photos very awkward.
Having your work be the basis of fame, that’s a far more stable feeling.
That goes against what I believe morally. That’s adultery, and if I’m accused of that, no, that’s not right. I have two kids who see that and remember that and judge me. It didn’t happen, and it’s not to be reported that way.
I was told I had a two per cent chance of getting pregnant, so I say she’s a two per cent baby.
I don’t really make decisions, I go with the flow.
I never read reviews at all. I’m proud of the work I did.
I want to go home at night and feel discomfort.
Once I start putting all my little insecurities in my mind, I’m not actually acting. Then it’s about me – and it should never be about me. It should be about the character.
The loss of a child is the most terrifying place for me to go.
Stay out of the sun, because it is the worst thing in terms of aging. I’m very medical. I come from a medical family.
Salary stories are intrusive. Do you ask your neighbour what they earn for their job?
Part of the reason of being an actor is you like playing other people’s lives and exploring all the psychologies in that and the emotions.
My life collapsed. People ran from me because suddenly it was ‘Oh my God! It’s over for her now!’
I wouldn’t want to be married to me, but luckily Tom Cruise does.
I was fair-skinned in a country that’s about the outdoors.
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