Zitat des Tages von Katherine Kelly:
As for getting married, I don't have strong feelings, really - I can take or leave it.
Awards go up at Mum and Dad's, but home is home, and I don't like to bring the office home.
I've got a green card, so I can work there any time, but I hate reading about actors going to America, because it's not like that anymore.
I've got a really good network that includes friends who all had babies within eight weeks of each other, plus my sister, a lovely part-time nanny and a nursery where Orla goes for half days.
I agree with my mother that having children removes a layer of skin that you never grow back.
You can't go back to work unless you have a great support network, whatever that is. My mum and dad, sister, and husband are great.
I really like lads and grew up with two brothers and all of their mates. I'm also close to several actors that I've played opposite.
What is happening now to me in my career is amazing, so I dwell on the things that are happening rather than the things that aren't, because what's the point? It doesn't make them happen.
Whenever there was a show like 'Calamity Jane,' me and my siblings would be plonked on stage in a costume because it was easier to have us in it rather than sort out babysitters.
I couldn't knock on people's door; if they answered the door and said, 'I don't want to speak to you,' I'd be like, 'Oh, OK then - I wouldn't either, to be honest.'
I would always consider going back to 'Coronation Street.'
I don't think, as a journalist, I'd ever get a story written. I'd probably spend five years researching it, and by the time I'd finish it, no one would be interested in it anymore.
I always took 'Coronation Street' a year at a time anyway. It was the 50th anniversary; I'd been there five years. It just felt right to leave.
It's lovely being in a hit.
Even at home, I don't have pictures on the wall of jobs I've done.
It's been great for me to play a real baddie.
That's the great thing about 'Corrie': it is an ensemble cast, and it didn't rest on one person's shoulders by any means.
It's hard when something's bigged up because you want people to watch it, so you have to promote it. It'd be great if it was the old-fashioned days when there was no press, and you just switched on and thought, 'Oh, God, what's going on?'
I don't really get a buzz from playing characters that are similar to me 'cause that's not acting to me.
I've never been a person to wish for stuff - I just take it as it comes.
If you drop a line in the theatre, you can usually find a way round it. But you can't do that as easily on television - you're in the hands of too many people.
It's better to have tried and failed than never tried, you can rest easy knowing you gave it a go.
There are lots of people in my life I just don't get the chance to see as much as I would like.
In the evening, we either go to the cinema or stay in and get a takeaway - my favourites are Chinese or Indian.
I remember trying to explain the class system to a Canadian friend when we started at RADA. The funniest thing was when I told her what bonfire night is all about. It's quite dark when you start breaking it down.
Our Sunday evenings tend to be quiet and relaxing, and we try to go to bed early before the start of another busy week.
I'd be a terrible journalist. I wouldn't want to pry; I just don't have that nature.
I've already been married six times in my career as an actress - twice as Becky - so I think a wedding of my own might feel too much like work!
I just take every script as it comes along and take it from there.
We take each week as it comes; we're juggling just like everybody else. It's all about spinning plates.
All I know is Andrew Davies is an amazing writer; I adore the scripts. I think that Jeremy Piven is outstanding.
As an actress, weekends can be spent working, but my husband, Ryan, works regular hours as an analytics manager for L'Oreal.
I get weepy even watching the news.
I've sort of overlapped every job that I've done, really.
I've got a great husband who's very good with Orla - she's a real daddy's girl.
The police who did our training said 'Happy Valley' is one of the only police programmes they can watch and not burst out laughing, saying, 'As if you'd do that.' They think it's really authentic.