Bleibe / Stay Bronx Clown Dumm / Silly Freundinnen / Girlfriends Gerade / Just Ihre / Your Immer / Always Oben / Up Schlafzimmer / Bedrooms Sein / Being Sie / You Spät / Late Unsere / Our Was auch immer / Whatever Woher / Where Wuchs / Grew Würde / Would
Being a woman in country is really empowering. It's a genre where you can truly say whatever you want to say as long as you're 100% behind your message and who you are.
Sometimes people just want you to fail. Except your really good friends. I've always known who my best friends were.
Whether you're on TV or on the stage, you have to work hard to stay fresh, real, and full of energy. You can't settle back. You always have to stay on your toes.
Happiness is a butterfly, which when pursued, is always just beyond your grasp, but which, if you will sit down quietly, may alight upon you.
It's always nerve-racking to take off your clothes on film. But doing it with a woman felt safer than with a man. You know you can say, 'Don't grab me there: That's where my cellulite is'!
It would be fun to be a redhead... you can get away with being, like, really volatile and fire-y because you're like, 'I'm just a redhead; what can I say?'
Today the world changes so quickly that in growing up we take leave not just of youth but of the world we were young in.
I often meet young directors who, you know, had a 'Ghostbusters' picture on their wall as they were growing up. And it's really nice. It just shows how inter-generational our industry is.
Perhaps women have always been in closer contact with reality than men: it would seem to be the just recompense for being deprived of idealism.