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Collaborating with someone on music is the same way you'd go about hanging out. You have to listen more than you talk.
When you read a comic book, there's a space between what's happening on the panel and what you have to literally see in your mind. That's not true of movies, where you see everything.
When you get into a fight with your partner or a friend, you usually have some weird, specific thing that you hold on to that you fight about that has nothing to do with what's going on.
The whole point is it's about getting as many people to come and see the play as you can.
My dad said to me growing up: 'When all is said and done, if you can count all your true friends on one hand, you're a lucky man.'
You had to make sure that the tone of your dress was not the same tone as the curtains, for instance.
When you're from another country, you want to spend time with your family. All your family can't come here. All your friends can't come here. You spend so much time here, you want to go there, too.
You get very possessive about characters, you feel you can see it in your mind and you want to play it.
Going through something difficult in your life, music, for me, is always a friend and something that helps you to figure things out.