Zitat des Tages von David Walton:
If you don't know how to play hockey, learn. If you quit, get back out there.
I love Jim and Pam at 'The Office.'
I definitely had a wild phase.
I think me having kids is helpful. It opens up a new little area of your heart.
There are a lot of techniques for developing a character.
It's always the most fun to play that guy who, like, doesn't have a filter - that really speaks exactly what they're feeling.
My wife likes the hockey smell because it's the smell of a warrior.
I'm trying to think how I impressed my wife. We had an on-stage kiss, and I really went for it. Because I liked her. Usually you can get away with it being just technical, but it was a problem when I ended up kissing my wife on the set. I'd say I stopped acting and kissed her on set.
I am not a man in decent shape.
Everyone can write jokes and makes things clever.
I love tennis. I've played it my whole life. Loved it since the age of three. I had an injury, so from the age of 13 to 24 I didn't play much. Then when I moved out to L.A., there were so many tennis courts that I rekindled the love.
From the age of 4 or 5, I loved to make people laugh.
Just because you get a show and it gets on the air doesn't mean jack. It certainly means that you'll be considered for stuff, but you've got to fight and claw to get every job.
Boston has a lot of European qualities to it, and one of them is the charm of its above-ground trollies.
I'm not jaded yet. I'm still at the point where, if someone comes up to me with great energy, I'm happy to meet them.
Jason Katims creates truly relatable three-dimensional people you fall in love with right away. Jason always puts a lot of heart into what he does. He has a way of touching your emotional core in a life-affirming way. And he's a great show runner.
The idea of doing a tennis movie is truly unbelievable to me. Well, first of all, they don't really exist.
I have straight married friends that other friends think are gay, and I have gay friends who don't throw that vibe at all. I know there's a full range out there, but I feel that gay men who aren't flamboyant are underrepresented on-screen.
I think what's most fun is playing someone who's sort of selfish and in a lot of ways unlikeable, but there's this really big heart underneath it that you get little glimpses of.
With a lot of comedies, the characters go on a journey, and they come back, and they're the exact same people.
Once I started working as a professional actor, it was like, 'Bye-bye waiting tables, bye-bye bartending, bye-bye all the cliched jobs actors do.' But after a year of not getting work, there's this really difficult conflict, like, 'Do I have to go back to being a waiter when people recognize me from a show?'
My first series, I wouldn't even know where to get a clip of it. It was called 'Cracking Up.' It was on 'FOX' in 2004.
I graduated from Brown in 2001, moved to New York, and spent a year and a half just looking up 'Backstage' magazine auditions and grinding.
Hockey on roller skates is like MMA in a bounce house: the elements are there, but the medium makes the whole thing ridiculous.
I had no idea how to make it as an actor. But I knew I wanted to.
I think a lot of guys you see - there seems to be this thing where you can have all the fun in the world, but in the end of the day, there's no one to share it with.
I love Boston, and at some point, my plan is to have a home back there.
It's so hard to make a comedy pilot and have a cool idea.
That's what I like about acting. You don't know where you'll be in year.
I love being around cool, fun guys, so I've always enjoyed talking to gay men. Maybe it's because I'm an inherent flirt, but it just feels very natural.
The first movie that made me cry was 'Dead Poets Society.' That one gets me. 'O Captain! My Captain!' That moment kills me.
People only see you as your last role, so it's hard to break out of that.
I actively avoided responsibility for as long as I possibly could.
I have a psychology degree, but I was a real theater rat.
Boston is so laced with jerseys that you can be dressed head to toe in team apparel and no one will look twice.