I like to build houses.

I think I was born out of my time.

I wake up as soon as it gets light.

I have a pretty good grip on who I am.

It's during wartime that innovations happen.

I've always been what they call a late bloomer.

The chaos of my life has a lot to do with my hair.

Theater has always been most important to my psyche.

I love to prune. I have a physical need to do things.

I was brought up in a very small town in upstate New York.

I want to be scary, boring, philosophical, funny, touching.

If I were born in the 1700s, I would look like a rounded man.

Fox was interested in a different title to 'Independence Day.'

I've always liked authors such as Philip K. Dick and Ray Bradbury.

I did a lot of Shakespeare touring when I was in college in Montana.

American audiences and European and Asian audiences are so different.

I'm intrigued by a tough situation, and I try to do something with it.

I've never really been a television watcher, so I never watch comedies.

My family and I are hooked on 'The Searchers.' I can't get enough of it.

Commercial movies have to end with moral flags flown again and all that.

Stacy Keach was really fun to work with, and Henry Winkler was very fun.

There was an idea of accepting everyone; there was no sense of exclusion.

That massiveness of bureaucracy at the VA is chronic and has been chronic.

Growing things and being able to live off the land has always appealed to me.

There's something that comes into you that's so exciting when you're directing.

I don't think I'm repeating anything I've done before, but sometimes I lose track.

I don't watch TV. I'd probably be a better person if I did, but it makes me anxious.

I have never forgotten John Candy's generosity. He showed me how to be a gentle leader.

I don't have a favorite fruit. There are things that thrill me each turn of the season.

There's always a certain kind of homework you have to do when there's an accent involved.

This whole climate change and what it's doing to our environment is frightening to people.

Globalisation is happening so fast it's confusing for people, and tolerance is threatened.

Listen! We're not just doing this for the money! We're doing this for a S*** LOAD of money!

Westerns give people a chance to see wide-open spaces and life before technology took over.

I think you do independent movies because you're looking to cut away from commercial movies.

I hate to admit it, because it makes me sound weird, but I'm Mr. Shoes. I own over 30 pairs.

Rural towns aren't always idyllic. It's easy to feel trapped and be aware of social hypocrisy.

I think, when I'm 73, I'm going to be getting softer, writing Hallmark cards, losing my teeth.

I'm not the first one to say it, but that time onstage is a heightened sense of present tense.

I'm often confused with other actors. But the people who know my work don't have that problem.

The first Westerns I saw as a child were those little 8-mm. home movies put out by Castle Films.

I co-own the ranch with my brother, and he and his wife are really the backbone of the operation.

I really enjoyed doing Albee's 'The Goat.' It's a powerful piece and a really exciting play to do.

I've done a lot of different kinds of things, so different people remember me for different things.

I like to wear my dad's shoes to auditions as sort of a lucky thing. I feel like I'm on solid ground.

The writers are pretty political and they want to get as big an audience as they can - they want the popular vote.

I'd have to say that it kills me that there's a concern that 'Torchwood' has gone to America to become Americanised.

'The Last Seduction,' 'Sleepless in Seattle' and 'While You Were Sleeping' did a lot to get me noticed for bigger roles.

I like those crisis moments - if you're on top of it and don't get pulled under by panic and fear, it's a very bonding thing.

We've seen with Brexit and other things that there's a dark impulse to be petulant and frustrated with complicated solutions.

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