Home is where my mom is.
I’m not really a big candy eater.
I always wanted to be a young mom, but generations of women have worked so hard so we can have a career and wait to have children. So I say carpe diem – take advantage of that.
Cherish the good, learn from the bad.
With all the technology we’re inventing and what they’re coming up with scientifically, people are having longer lifetimes. It’s scary, but in the same sense it’s also very exciting.
I’m a Christian. I go to church when I can. I was raised Baptist. I went to a Lutheran school. I’m a nondenominational practicing Christian. I have a lot of faith.
I think they should take everyone who works for The National Enquirer and the Star, and everyone who works for Us Weekly, and put them all to work looking for terrorists. I think they would find the terrorists. All of them. It would be genius!
I am honored to be a part of that film. It has a really important message, embracing one’s individuality. It was the most universal film I’ve ever read.
To give Tinker Bell a voice for the first time in history is such an honor.
I don’t really take myself very seriously.
I ask a lot because I’m very curious – especially about ex-girlfriends. I’m pretty good at getting the answers, too.
I’ve been trained in dancing and I used to be quite good, though I am a bit rusty right now. But I could probably brush up in a couple of months.
Tired is not a word in my vocabulary.
I find this life so interesting.
If I could be a third of the woman that my mom is and have a third of the strength that she has, then I will have done good by this life.
I’ve never formally trained in acting, so I’m very instinctual and visceral with decisions.
It’s always been my mom and I against the world.
My trouble is I talk first and think later.
My singing voice isn’t like my speaking voice.
I don’t think Hollywood per se is supposed to be taken seriously, otherwise, dear Lord, that would be frightening.
It blows my mind the way Frank Miller can write.