Theatre demands different muscles and different aspects of one’s personality.
I believe that acting in any medium is the same thing, it’s discovering the truth in where you are.
The hardest thing for me is not to keep laughing. Jennifer particularly is like a clown.
The only set thing I do is that I really, really memorize the lines. I’ve gotta be so comfortable with the words.
I like the fact that Jack is always wearing a tie except when he’s on a mission. I do like it when I get out there and dress up, or dress down, a little bit.
One day, we were doing a serious scene and fast talking like we do and we could not stop laughing and the director had to stop the production. We had to go to our trailer and calm down and do it all again.
It’s disgusting that a Broadway show can’t try out anymore, that no matter where they are in the world, there is this massive dialogue going on between people damning or praising it.
My mother couldn’t have been happier when I said I was moving to New York.
The stage is where I feel most comfortable, and I miss it all the time.
You can only do so much theatre.
The joy is when you work with great actors, it just comes to life in a way that you never even imagined.
What I realized was how difficult an hour show is and how miserable you can be if you’re not happy doing it.
I find that everything I do is demanding, like Jack Bristow is a complicated man and I do a lot of explaining in the show, it takes a lot of energy and concentration.
In our show you have to pay attention and know what happened before. I think it’s very intelligent entertainment. It makes demands of viewers that a lot of shows don’t.
Growing up I was involved in children’s theater, so I was definitely on the path to be an actor and a singer.