I was in love with Michael Keaton. He was very funny.
You can be diagnosed and treated early. And there is hope for the future.
It doesn't help to contemplate how sad your life is. You have to move on.
I went on the 'Letterman' show the first time to plug something, and then I came back as the Fool, the court jester.
Take a step back, evaluate what is important, and enjoy life.
My mother was a real tough cookie. She raised the three of us, and she worked at the same time.
I don't let Molly watch much television. The only stations I let her watch are PBS and the Disney Channel. The cartoons on the other stations are too violent and filled with obnoxious commercials.
I have heard all kinds of stories about telling employers about MS and I really don't know what the answer is. I am a private person, but I have found support by talking to fellow MSrs in the community.
There were symptoms that I saw, and though I went to many doctors and had many tests, no one diagnosed MS.
I had to learn to walk again, talk again, think again.
My doctor said, for want of a better word, now that we've got medicines out here that can help, let's put you on one of them and say we're treating MS.
My daughter couldn't wake me up, so they called 911. They rushed me to the hospital. They drilled a hole in my head and wrapped a coil around my brain. I was unconscious for a week, and I was in rehab for two months - couldn't walk, couldn't talk. Now I've relearned everything. I'm so happy.
Being a successful Hollywood actress may be challenging, but little did I know that the very body that had always been my calling card would betray me.
My father died when I was 11. He was a vaudeville comedian. He worked in one movie, 'Ladies of the Chorus,' as Marilyn Monroe's father.
There's people doing whatever the hell they want and getting away with it.
When I was a dancer, I would see that dancers were treated like garbage. I mean like, like extras.
People ask me about my limp. I say, 'You know, I don't know how bad it is, because I don't watch - I don't watch myself.' I don't look at it. I don't.
Speed bumps, I was thinking, you know, you're driving along, everything's OK, and then there's a speed bump to go, 'Slow down.' Go over it real slowly, and you hit the pedal, and you keep going, and I just thought it was kind of a nice metaphor for life.
I loved the stories my parents and grandparents would read to me.
If you get somebody laughing - and then stick in a point about something important - they'll remember it.
I have one brother who is a surgeon, there's me, and my other brother builds boats.
Usually, the extras have a different mentality. I had the mentality of an artist, because I was a 'ballet-rina.' But most extras are out to make a fast buck for nothing. They're 'atmosphere.'
I thought, 'If I can't be prom queen, I can dance 'Les Sylphide.'
I was in an acting class taught by Eric Morris, and Jack Nicholson was in the class. He wrote the script for 'Head', so all of us in the class got little tiny parts in the movie.
You have to find out what's right for you, so it's trial and error. You are going to be all right if you accept realistic goals for yourself.
How come women are treated differently from men all the time? Not only handicapped people, but women - and handicapped women, forget it!
What is the difference between an actress over 50 and an actress with a disability? Nothing. They both can't find work.
When you're a kid, you should be a kid.
Joan Collins was the best. She really could sort of pull it off, be really outrageous and never even flinch.
God is in all - I believe in God, yes. And I believe God is in us.
'30 Rock' is one of the best things on TV, I think.
I'd like to play something classical. I'm in the Strindberg society, and we do readings of Strindberg plays. I'd love to do Nora in 'A Doll's House.' And Chekhov. I have been working back to back on what I call 'regular jobs,' so it's hard to do plays.