The physicality of a real relationship - one that encompasses mind, body and soul - ultimately makes it more fulfilling and powerful than any virtual relationship ever could be.
I love playing characters that are strong, when there's physicality involved.
Going to the darkest place you can to make yourself really upset and adding that with the physicality and running around, you can work yourself into hysteria that way.
When my physicality is involved, it's kind of my comfort zone, so I find it much easier to access emotions.
Men dominate because of physicality, and thus they have mercy where women do not.
The biggest challenge is probably some of the physicality. Some stuff you would never want to experience, in real life, but it's still such an adventure that it's worth all the scrapes and bruises and mud between the toes.
Dance involves physicality, it involves spirituality and even brains.
I feel much more physically connected to my voice, and I like the physicality of the voice, and how the voice can physically occupy a song.
When you are no more identified with your physicality, you become available to Grace.
I'd never even seen orange cheese. I mean, who decided to make that orange? And so there was something different about me that they wanted to crush. I don't think it had anything to do with my physicality, but every single day in school it was, "You're the ugliest thing I've ever seen. "
When you dance intensely, you are really aware of your physicality, and that's always great to have as a tool, when you're an actress.
With a theatre audience there's always the additional sense of a sustained challenge of which I'm acutely aware and for which you need to have the tools ready - your voice, physicality, brain.
Unless it's a specific accent, or something about physicality you have to change, I am generally not such a conscious actor.
I use people's real voices because I want realism. So often I mention the actors' physicality because I want it to be like a real documentary.
There's a physicality and confidence to Americans; they're very present. That's something I enjoy being around because it rubs off on you.
I'm a big believer in the Wii. I love the physicality of the Wii controller, and how you can get the feeling of throwing a bowling ball or swinging a golf club. Those are the kinds of games I really like.
I find flying interesting in that it's a very intimate experience. You're so close, physically, to one or two other people and you eat, sleep, do everything together. I've met the most extraordinary people on planes, some of whom I've stayed in touch with, some I haven't. Even if you're beside someone who ignores you for eight hours, there's a physicality you wouldn't put up with from anyone other than someone you knew well. You're in it together, even if you never say a word to one another.
All of my films I've made have had an element of physicality and action but I really enjoy the drama of it because it's where I feel I'm really doing something.
I find the relationship of sensation and physicality, and, for me, it's music like anything else. It's a different way of expressing and exploring sound. I find it really beautiful.
For whatever reason I was always obsessed with the potential of humanity's physicality. Especially since we grew up with such a non-physical philosophy.