The future is created through memory.
I long for the countryside. That's where I get my calm and tranquillity - from being able to come and find a spot of green.
I'm really old-fashioned. An Epsom salt bath, that's genuinely better than any massage.
The calibre of TV's changing. It's becoming much more epic. To rival film, definitely.
My dad took me for an audition once, to show me, OK, you want to be a child actor, this is what its like. I sang a folk song about donkeys on this West End stage with this big director, and there was a queue of 200 girls all singing Memory. I was terrible. Terrible.
I grew up around horses, but acting and riding on camera is a whole different thing.
I looked around one stage school when I was maybe nine. It just scared the bejesus out of me. I was incredibly open, and the girls seemed fierce and determined.
Because I can go to Vegas and make the money I do, I'm able to spend a lot more time producing music that I love.
I do miss the excitement of seeing history up close, of having intimate knowledge, through direct experience, of what happens when people and governments clash, but I do not miss the danger or the constant displacement.
she’s not pretty, that word is too small. She is not like the girls I used to stare at, all bend and curve and softness. She is small but strong, and her bright eyes demand attention. Looking at her is like waking up.
The church must acclimate to a changing world, or she will destine herself to irrelevance or even extinction. . . . One of those dramatic changes in our environment is the shift from words to images. To do church in a way that is entirely text driven is the kiss of death.