Acceptance and tolerance and forgiveness, those are life-altering lessons.Collection: Forgiveness
Your children are grown and your career has slowed down - all the stuff that took up so much attention is gone, and you're left with expansive time and space. You have to reimagine who you are and what life is about.Collection: Space
I am tortured when I am away from my family, from my children. I am horribly guilt-ridden.Collection: Family
For me, nothing has ever taken precedence over being a mother and having a family and a home.Collection: Family
The natural state of motherhood is unselfishness. When you become a mother, you are no longer the center of your own universe. You relinquish that position to your children.Collection: Mom
All through life I've harbored anger rather than expressed it at the moment.Collection: Anger
To my mind the election was stolen by George Bush and we have been suffering ever since under this man's leadership.Collection: Leadership
The only place I've felt was really my home is my cabin up north. There's something in the water there that connects me to that place. There's also this sense of isolation and loneliness about it that I've never been able to shake.
I like playing characters who are out there on the edge, where they can explode at any moment or fall off the precipice.
One of the things I love about acting is that it reveals a certain something about yourself, but it doesn't reveal your own personal story.
Allow the diversity to exist. There is nothing wrong with it. Hell, we put up with the religious right-we can put up with transgendered human beings.
TV is sort of the only way to go for an actress my age to make a decent salary; with independent films, you just can't.
For me, acting was always a way to explore emotions - to dip into the well and really try to reach rock bottom down there. That was the most exciting part of it. I hadn't found anything that really allowed me to do that until I came upon acting.
I love being a mother. I loved being a daughter, a sister, a wife. I love being a woman with men. I love having given birth.
I've been thinking a lot about next year, which will be the first time in 25 years that I don't have a child at home.
At a certain age, death becomes familiar to you-or a loss becomes familiar-the tragedies that are more commonplace in life.
It comes down to something really simple: Can I visualize myself playing those scenes? If that happens, then I know that I will probably end up doing it.
Because Shakespeare's language is so expansive, we're under this misconception that it's difficult. But I discovered that it's easy because it's so brilliantly written. The words are perfect, and the language is intelligent and very emotional.
Families survive, one way or another. You have a tie, a connection that exists long after death, through many lifetimes.
I had never done Shakespeare before, but I don't think you can be an actor and not do it. There were moments when I thought, I'm just not going to be able to pull this off.
I never felt like I belonged in Minnesota when I was growing up there. That's why I was out the door as soon as I turned 18.
I worked on my voice for Sweet Dreams, but only to match my speaking voice to Patsy's actual singing voice. That was my way into that character.
In families there is always the mythology. My father died when my kids were quite young still, and yet they still tell his stories. That is how a person lives on.
Sometimes the odds are against you-the director doesn't know what the hell he's doing, or something falls apart in the production, or you're working with an actor who's just unbearable.
Successful model? That's a myth. The year I modeled was the most painful year of my life. Editors would always talk to you in the third person as though you were merely a piece of merchandise.
The worst is when I talk myself into something. Sometimes you take things because you want to work with a certain actor, or you want to work with a director, even if the script or the part's not that great.
To work on the actual location I think is great. This thing of going to Canada and pretending you're in New York, it's terrible.
To work with a director that has emotional commitment and passion toward the characters, and the piece, and the experiences, it only enriches your work.
We are not the originators of the story. I think it's actually the opposite when you're an actor. You're telling somebody else's story.
Once I started on 'Frances' I discovered it was literally a bottomless well. It devastated me to maintain that for eighteen weeks, to be immersed in this state of rage for twelve to eighteen hours a day. It spilled all over, into other areas of my life.
If I didn't have children I'd be a much better actress. I wouldn't be so distracted. I could pour 100 percent of my energies into it, to promote the investigation which acting is.
I could be making a lot more money now if I had chosen a different kind of movie, but none of that matters to me... I've done the parts I wanted to do.
Box office success has never meant anything. I couldn't get a film made if I paid for it myself. So I'm not 'box office' and never have been, and that's never entered into my kind of mind set.
I've worked with some teachers and coaches over the years, but I didn't really study theater or technique or voice or any of that stuff extensively.