Night brings our troubles to the light, rather than banishes them.
And because of President Obama, more women than ever are serving in the Cabinet and on the Supreme Court.
It's better to be a corporation today than to be a woman in front of the Supreme Court.
No mother in the world wants her daughter to have fewer rights than she did.
This year women learned that if we aren't at the table, we're on the menu.
I think young people are recognizing the power of institutions, and we have to really dismantle a lot of the stigma and shame, culturally, but we also have to change things in terms of how government and institutions deal with this.
At Planned Parenthood, we see the impact of abortion stigma firsthand, in the women who delay getting reproductive health care because they fear they’ll be labeled and judged. We see the effect of stigma on doctors, health center staffers, and others who help provide abortion services. And we see the impact in laws that regulate and restrict abortion in ways that would never happen with any other medical procedure.
I think that's more a reflection of the fact I've never been a student of any particular school of writing, or even listening.
I am extraordinarily lucky, I was born in a family of strong moral values, and in my life I was able to do what I liked best: debuts, great theatres, but above all, inner and deep satisfaction.
Believe the unbelievable and receive the impossible.
By the time I would have graduated, at 22, I was a writer and featured performer on Saturday Night Live.