I've been around the block.

I'm dying for people to let me be funny!

My God, I have so much bounty in my life.

I was a spooky kid; that was just my nature.

Who wouldn't want to play the leader of the free world?

If you can see it, you can be it. And I believe in that.

I just love the idea of doing an all-female play on Broadway.

I have no ability or interest to play that weak, beaten person.

I will happily work anywhere they need me to if they pay me well.

Whenever I approach any character, I try to find examples to draw upon.

There are lots of rats. It's a dirty little secret at the Delacorte Theatre.

We have to be able to use our imaginations to make the character's experiences real to us.

I think there is a certain gravitas about me. My energy can be very big and yet contained.

I get to play a lot of powerful, smartest women in the room. And that's deeply satisfying.

I'm not familiar with an unaccepting family. But in my profession, nothing can be foreign.

I don't look presidential. I don't wear, you know, three-piece suits and have my hair perfectly coiffed.

The audience has its own gestalt, and it becomes another character - a character that changes each night.

OK, so I'm a working mom that also gets to kiss George Clooney. That's a little bit of a perk of the job.

Trying to find a way to represent something that is truly frightening on stage is a fascinating challenge.

I never had any preconceived ideas about acting, because I always thought I was going to be a visual artist.

I was in several Shakespeare in the Park productions in my younger years, but I've been busy with other things for a while.

How do you stand tall and strong as a woman while trying to be the smartest woman in the room and try to remain non-threatening?

It's really interesting because I'm a Quaker... so it's been radical to me to be hired by the Department of Defense under contract.

Tim Burton is an artist who has had a huge influence on me. I definitely share his sensibility. It's a joyful approach to darkness.

Personally, I don't want to do theater that's very stylish, when it's just stories on stage that are basically the same as TV or film.

I know all my tricks, and I'm pretty bored with them, so if that's all someone wants, I'd rather wait for TV money and not work so hard.

You know, the '80s, as crazy as the '80s were, that was a surprisingly kind and generous environment that I found myself in as a teenager.

We are in this amazing age of television where there's an incredible amount and an incredible quality of television, of long-form narrative.

It's all really nice to have my pretend Secret Service people paying me respect, but the moment I walk in the door, it's back to being 'Mom.'

I love seeing people in their mess. I find that heartwarming. Charm just doesn't interest me. If I want to see charming people, I can watch TV.

Every time I do a play, I'm like, 'When do I get to do the one where I wear a gown, sit in a chair, and say funny things?' I'd love to do that.

By nature, my default place is a very introverted one, so it's funny to be in such an extroverted profession. I'm a little inappropriately in it.

If I'm asking people to give me two hours of their time, it's because I really feel like they need to listen to what the writer is talking about.

You always hear about the disempowered actor, their fate in other people's hands. It's just really wonderful to experience it the other way around.

When I work onstage, I want to play roles that have real, deep theatricality, that aren't the sort you would easily see on television and in the movies.

When I was nursing my son, you're up all the time during the first year, and you're sort of brain dead. So I'd find myself watching Turner Classic Movies at odd hours.

In some ways, I missed my era because I'm big and messy and have big feelings and take up space on a stage rather than being diminutive and childlike in my woman-ness.

I've been told I'm bright. But when I act, I get incredibly stupid. I feel my intellect slowing down. I feel it happening physically. And that's not negative in acting!

I see a lot of art; we see a lot of music, films at Sundance... that influences me and informs me more than theater just because I make a bigger effort to see other art forms.

The first play I ever did was with Michael Langham, Brian Bedford, and Colm Feore, at Stratford Festival. That was my first professional job, and I got to work with Garland Wright and so many great artists.

I went to an art school in high school and got in a little trouble like you do when you're a teenager and not being closely supervised. I did. I followed the Dead around, and it was fun. It was great. It was kind and sweet and lovely.

I ended up landing in London out of high school, and I saw a performance that Vanessa Redgrave gave, just because it was a cheap ticket, and I didn't know what to do with my afternoon, and I went in, and I saw this Eugene O'Neill play, and I sat in the fifth row, and I watched her.

I see artists as the first responders. And when the proverbial crap hits the fan, we are there to be of service, to tell the story, to bring a balm, to soothe, to provide catharsis. You know, not to make our work any more important or less important, but just that there is a great importance to it.

You talk through what exactly happened to Howard Dean on the campaign trail, what Bill Clinton must have lived through, what the daily grind of doing what these people have to do. And they can never lose their temper, they can never be tired, and they can never slip up, or it's on-camera, and it's everywhere - and it's over.

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