What one gets, I hope, is that all you can do is the best you can do.
I never go to a gym unless I have to for a role, a contract. I try to take care of myself as a human being, not because I have to be in front of the camera.
I'm 36 years old, and I'm growing up. Little by little.
I am not generous about telling people who I am and what I like to do because it's my life and it only belongs to me and my friends and family.
I always choose my projects for the script or what the director want to tell with that story. And if I like the story.
I always think that when we actors talk about the films that we've done we run the risk of destroying everything.
If you have what you want to say inside, and if you are crying for something that is true inside, it doesn't matter. The camera always sees it.
My mum's parents were from Ireland, my dad's mum was American-Irish.
I appeal to women not to let themselves become corrupted by male power. Emancipation is something more than a 'ticket' to serve in the army.
But the trouble with sainthood these days is the robe-and-halo imagery that gets stuck onto it. " Carl got that brooding look again. "People forget that robes were street clothes once. . . and still are, in a lot of places. And halos are to that fierce air of innocence what speech balloons in comics are to the sound of the voice itself. Shorthand. But most people just see an old symbol and don't bother looking behind it for the meaning. Sainthood starts to look old-fashioned, unattainable. . . even repellent. Actually, you can see it all around, once you learn to spot it.
Politeness of mind consists in thinking chaste and refined thoughts.