Shortening the Gap Between Where You Are and Where You’d Like To Be
The only way you’re going to get to where you want to go is to keep going
The only way you’re going to get to where you want to go is to keep going
Funny, violent, beautiful and quiet. It’s almost perfect.
“I do love comedy. I’ve been a fan of it since I’ve been a little kid,” said the 40-year-old actor, who plays womanizing advertising executive Don Draper on the show that sparked AMC’s foray into original programming.
“We’re all just trying to get a job and work here. Everybody realizes that actors are gonna mess up once in a while. That really helped change my mind set.”
Despite being the second heavy drama for Harrelson, he admits that his true passion is for comedies, which he feels more natural about.
How does a television network “kill off” a program? That’s easy — put it in a terrible time slot.
“I quickly realized I was going to disappoint a lot of people.”
Hugh Jackman is coming back to Broadway in a show titled… Hugh Jackman, Back on Broadway.
“Every time I’m handed a new script, I feel like a largemouth bass at a nightcrawler convention.”
Bobby Cannavale is set to star as Nick Arnstein in the upcoming Broadway revival of Funny Girl.
When Clark Gregg signed on to play Agent Phil Coulson in the Iron Man franchise, he didn’t necessarily think he’d be promoting the series’ third installment in 2011.
Trey Parker and Matt Stone went from being cable TV’s darlings to Broadway superstars after The Book of Mormon swept this year’s Tony Awards and has been sold out for every performance through the end of this year.
“A lot of the time you go to work, then you have lunch by yourself, then you go back to work. There are those few movies where you actually sit down with your co-star and your director and have lunch together. Three months in, we still enjoy having dinner together and we still go out to dinner in LA now.”
Dexter star Jennifer Carpenter, who plays police detective Debra Morgan in the hit Showtime series, says she wouldn’t be part of the critically acclaimed drama if it wasn’t for Laura Linney.
There’s a very clichéd bad guy in American movies, and you know who he is, the blond-haired guy who talks in an accent and from the moment he’s on screen you know everything about him.”
Andy Whitfield, the former star of Spartacus: Blood and Sand, died of non-Hodgkin Lymphoma Sunday morning in Sydney Australia.
“I don’t sort of say to myself, ‘Oh well, this year is the year I have to find some huge earth-shaking part that will win me an Oscar,’” explained Weaver
“I hadn’t even considered doing a television show for ten years”
As if understanding the concepts of self-promotion weren’t hard enough, actors have at least three additional problems to surmount
Actor Christopher J. Hanke is currently commanding plenty of applause these days on Broadway for his role in How To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying where he plays the arrogant and snobbish character Bud Frump.