I certainly hope I'm not still answering child-star questions by the time I reach menopause.
My dream role would probably be a psycho killer, because the whole thing I love about movies is that you get to do things you could never do in real life, and that would be my way of vicariously experiencing being a psycho killer. Also, it's incredibly romantic.
This is my costume. I'm a homicidal maniac. They look just like everyone else.
I'm a TV addict, and I personally really enjoy reality TV.
I want a Mini-Cooper because it's fuel efficient, emissions efficient and all that stuff. It's small and better for the environment. I think that will be my next car.
I'm an actor who hates dialogue and the present day and reality.
I like the way my own feet smell. I love to smell my sneakers when I take them off.
I've never been to a race car race before.
I was a big sci-fi fantasy geek when I was younger... secretly, in my room.
I'm a lazy, lazy girl.
I think I'm better at playing difficult than I am at being normal. And to me that's something I'm working on now. I'm not really that difficult or complex a person, so it's interesting to me that it's just so much harder for me to play an everygirl.
Any obsession is dangerous.
I think that I need to work on being comfortable at being normal, everyday-ish on camera. Unlike a lot of actors, I think that's the thing that I'm not so comfortable with.
I think that the best career that someone can have is one that's reflective of their personal tastes.
My brother always teases me about my forehead: 'I could eat off it!'
I would love to fly privately, but unfortunately, I don't. I don't summer anywhere either.
Naturally, my body language changes given whatever environment I'm in.
I don't have life rage anymore.
I just want to be married, or just engaged. Basically, I just want a ring. And the tax break.
I'm one of those people who loves to fly.
My sister and I shared a bedroom our entire lives and I believe she discovered the Beatles when she was about 11 and I'm four years younger. So from the age of 7 until 17 we had nothing but Beatles paraphernalia in our room, even those little stuffed Beatles that went on stands that are dressed as the Sgt. Pepper band.
We have so much pride in welcoming these passengers onto the plane, and they have so much pride in travel. It's something that I definitely always remember, when I'm playing a scene on the plane, just to imbue everything with that sense of excitement.
I come from one of these hideous backgrounds where being sincere is like - ugh, you might as well kill yourself.
The whole growing-up process seems to have eluded me.
I feel like some of the best talent is on TV right now, with the writing, acting and great directors. I've also been looking for the consistency of work that TV provides for you. And, I always thought it would be really interesting to live with a character for months, if not years.
It's fun to be sarcastic, but now I'm able to express myself in a way that's much more sincere.
I've always been a really ambitious person.
Every night I fell asleep to a different Beatles album. So I'm very familiar with the Beatles; Ringo was my favorite Beatle until I grew up and then changed. I made the switch over to George Harrison just in time to regain my cool.
I've been to therapists my whole life. I find the less attention I pay to food, the healthier I am. Any obsession is dangerous. And a whole country that's obsessed with one thing, unless it's, like, jeans, it's very dangerous. Everyone's obsessed right now with carbohydrates in this country. It's ridiculous.
I've been looking to do TV for a while. I've always done guest starring stuff. I've done a couple of multi-episode arcs, and I've always loved the experience.
I always knew that I was kind of bored; the regular life of a child didn't fit me.
I don't come from money.
I mean, I sing. But I don't think I'm a good enough singer to do any kind of musical.
I think I've always been interested in playing people who are judged very harshly.
We all have insecurities, and the thing that makes them crippling is that we all have the ability to blow them up into such huge issues in our minds, that we might as well have a facial deformity. It keeps us from really going out there and living our lives, and forgetting about hating yourself and just experiencing the world around you.
I'm really open to everything.
When you're doing something where you really like the material, it doesn't matter what medium it's in.
I guess I'm a workaholic!
There are a lot of theories about Shakespeare.
I think the thing that I always try to do - because it piques my interest - is to play really different parts all the time.
I could easily exist on less money, but I like the way I live now.
We might all be so afraid to be who we are, but in the end, it's really you're individual, unique qualities that make you attractive to people.
Well, I think I've had a fairly meandering career.
To play someone who is who they are because of the happiness and contentedness that they've known in their life is interesting because of sort of how banal it is.
I love the solitude of being on a plane and finally getting to read an entire book and being left alone.
I think I'm better at playing difficult than I am at being normal.
This life that I've led has been really well suited for me.
Everything, I think, about acting is based on imagination.
My sister discovered the Beatles when she was about 11 and I'm four years younger. So we had nothing but Beatles paraphernalia. Every night I fell asleep to a different Beatles album.
You won't see me in a better mood than 4:00 in the morning on my way to work.
I think it's really great to be able to stick with a character for a long period of time. It's not like you have one shot, and that's it.
Well, it's difficult to fall in love with a character when you just read the pilot. You don't really know who the character is.
I work out.
I'm trying to just go with the flow and learn from the people around me.
I've always done guest-starring stuff.
When I was a little girl - well, like, a teenager - I wanted to be Sam Jackson. I always wanted to be men.
I can't think of anything that I turned down that became big and successful.
Doing films as an actor, you spend maybe 40 percent of the year doing your chosen profession. If you are on a successful TV show, you spend 80 percent of your year doing the thing you love.
I think that I need to work on being comfortable at being normal, everyday-ish on camera.
I'm merely trying to be something akin to a nice, kind, good actress.
You always fear when you're making a movie that has a moral to the story that people are going to reject the idea of being taught a lesson.
I once ate McDonald's three times in one day.
I was really bored and unhappy in school, and I used to act out and do horrible things.
I think I am naturally attracted to things that are a little bit out of this world.
I like to do things sort of intuitively, I think.
My mom knows when something is real and something is not.
All the roles are for boys. The girls' roles are either small or all the same. There's just nothing interesting.
People are giving me more respect.
Well, I think most people understand that there's a big difference between who you are and who, you know, you play.
Unless it's a specific accent, or something about physicality you have to change, I am generally not such a conscious actor.
My roommate and my boyfriend, they both know I am compulsive and controlling.
I didn't use to think anything was worth keeping private. Now I do.
When I'm acting in a film that I'm not producing, I stay to myself.
I mean, I don't like anyone who likes themselves too much.
I don't really need a lot of help from a director.
I don't think I'm an outsider at all.
I find the less attention I pay to food, the healthier I am.
I've been to therapists my whole life.
A director should cast a person who fits into their script.
What you feel is important may not be what the director feels is important.
I tend to fight for something that I believe in.
I eat crap.
I'm incredibly naive.
I always think that I've embarrassed myself.
The movies I made early on may not have been great, but they were all commercially successful.
I'm always in bed by 11 or 12 and people laugh all the time - they want me to hang out until two in the morning, but n-n-no, I need my nine hours.
I take Wellbutrin because I'm afraid to go into stores. I'm afraid people are going to yell at me.
I'm very insecure.
I'm immature.
As a kid, I was told to talk as much as possible.
I am a Christian. I haven't really talked about that before. It is something very private. But I do pray and my beliefs are very important to me.
As a teenager, my favourite rejection was, 'She looks too healthy,' which of course translates as, 'She needs to lose weight.'
I don't think I like characters who are afraid and ashamed of who they are.
I think people who suffer from depression, unless it's post-traumatic, are probably going to struggle with it for their whole life.
I stand up for other people, I'm very protective of people around me. If I feel like somebody is getting a bad rap or being unfairly picked on, I will stand up for them, absolutely.
I'm getting older now, so I should think about a family, but certainly not tomorrow.
I went through an awkward adolescence and had braces.
For years, I hated myself. I covered the mirrors in my house. I literally couldn't have a mirror in my room.
I'm so glad I'm not 20 years old anymore. I was in a hurricane. I'm a lot calmer now. I don't cause destruction for myself and others everywhere I go.
I knew I would never be cast as the pretty girl.