When you don't know what you're doing, fake it.
In the '80s, I was the only one who didn't watch the shows about teenagers. I had to go over to friends' houses to see them. I still don't have a TV!
I’ve often been told that I’m a bit strange. I hear that pretty regularly, but it is not how I see myself. I feel like I’m extremely normal. I do have a bizarre face that’s a bit out of proportion. I guess that’s why some people see me as strange.
If I ever get married myself, it’ll be in jeans.
A film is a great deal about what you see, and the silhouette of a character tells you a lot. I'd love to go into film costume.
I believe a lot in the relationship between performers. When you're supported by someone's eyes, you're not alone.
Paris is where my family are, but it's not really home now because I have dear friends in London and dear friends in New York.
There's an old Sysan saying that the soup of life is salty enough without adding tears to it.
Different persons growing up in the same language are like different bushes trimmed and trained to take the shape of identical elephants. The anatomical details of twigs and branches will fulfill the elephantine form differently from bush to bush, but the overall outward results are alike.
Perhaps even more than elsewhere current notions of what is desirable and practicable are here still of a kind which may well produce the opposite of what they promise.
In my real life I had to confront the sins of the father, but it's also a symbolic journey - a social, psychological, sexual journey for women and minorities who must pass through patriarchy and the symbolic order in order to claim a self.