I have dual citizenship with Italy.

I was going to go be an auto mechanic.

Sometimes I'm an ass, sometimes I'm sweet as peaches.

My sisters and mom raised me to respect women and open doors for them.

I'm tough on the outside and soft on the inside... I'm really a shy guy.

I try to be good to myself. Look, we're human and people have differences.

I'm tough on the outside and soft on the inside [...] I'm really a shy guy.

Unless I'm running and yelling, then you really see how crooked my mouth is!

I'm a homebody, I'd rather be in the kitchen cooking than hanging out in a bar.

I'm a homebody. I'd rather be in the kitchen cooking than hanging out in a bar.

When your a kid,everybody runs around witha red cape-we all wanted to be SUPERMAN or BATMAN.

For me, I think my traveling is usually a lot of photographic memories, and I take a lot of photos.

I'm happy to be on a show that's bridging that gap of 'Okay, I'm not a teenager anymore, I'm a man.'

The older I get, the easier it is to just be present in the moment, and understand what a man is going through.

You have to pay attention to the work on the page and make it as good as possible because it could be your last.

I was never one to stand on a soap box and say, "This is how you need to live your life!" It was never about that.

My first commercial ever was a Dr. Pepper commercial. And then I did a Mountain Dew commercial. A lot of soft drinks.

I love being around people that contribute. It doesn't matter where the good idea comes from. A good idea is a good idea.

Acting is very sacred. Anyone who stands in front of a crew with the camera recording their emotions is a brave individual.

I don't want to impose on anyone else and make anyone else emotional or anything. I tend to quietly cry, kind of turn away.

I was either going to be an actor, a Naval aviator, or a pediatric surgeon. Those were the three things that I wanted to do.

I think we need to feel, to come together, to look at our differences as a benefit to who we are as people on the same planet.

People forget that actors are actors, who are looking to put on the clothes and the character, and then shed it just as easily.

I think, being a kid, you always think about being a movie star. And then as I got older, I started thinking about just the work.

I'd love to hold a koala. They sleep 22 hours a day, eat eucalyptus leaves and just hang out. I want to spend some time with that guy.

I got very lucky with the family I was born into. From my older sisters to my mother and father, they're just good, kind-hearted people.

There were a million different things I could have chosen or wanted to do, but the path of an artist was the one that pulled me the most.

For me, what grabs my attention about the project is usually the character immediately and then the story, and then the people that are involved.

I think that any good storytelling lends itself to closing a chapter but also knowing that there's a few more volumes beyond that to dream off of.

My job is always going to change; the characters that I'm playing are always going to change. I look forward to playing a grandfather at some point.

I go to the store. I go get my car fixed. I have friends. I have a life, but nobody needs to know about it. Because I'm just the same as anyone else.

I don't think of myself as anything more than a person who sits in the living room with you telling you a story. I just happen to be in 16 million living rooms.

I try to find something in everyone that I play - even the most heinous ones. You have to find something that is real and vulnerable about everything that you play.

In general, I pack really simply. Every shirt that I pack is going to work with every pant that I pack and every sweater that I pack. So, I can mix and match easily.

In THE WHISPERS, I played a father, with an amazingly talented actor, Kyle Breitkopf. I've played a dad a lot, so it's nice again to be in that world [in This Is Us].

If you have your mind in the right direction, and your heart is full of the right kind of stuff, you'll succeed and you'll triumph over adversity, over really anything.

Some places that I have been, I have brought a token or some home from different places I have been. Some of them are around the house, and some of them are tucked away safely.

Sleep when you can, rest when you can, take care of yourself, eat well, and hopefully, you just take advantage of the opportunities that are presented to you and spread some good.

You have to have sympathy for the villain. Even the most disgusting ones, you have to find something to connect with. I try to put as much of myself in every single character that I play.

It's an all-inclusive package, when you get to be creative and run a little country while you're on a set and doing it with people that you enjoy working with and you all have a say in it.

Given the loss of a child or the birth of a child or anything like that, I think it's just I'm more moved by life, the older I get, so it's easier to connect to the characters that I play.

I used to sit when I was a kid, from 14 or 15 on, with a book or a paper or a magazine in front of a mirror and teach myself to speak with a more straight mouth, so it wasn't so pronounced.

I was used to playing misled youth, rough-and-tumble guys. It was nice to get back to a big-hearted, warm and gentle soul, a guy who is destined for something a lot larger than he ever expected.

As an actor it's like, go with whatever excites you as an actor. What are you're going to invest yourself in as a character? What are you going to get into? Have a variety of characters to play.

I found that people want stories that are not too dissimilar from theirs. People want to be reminded that, let's say, struggle in your family is being felt by other people, that you're not alone.

I pretty much grew up in the Clubber Lang/Ivan Drago era. That was more my time. I've always been a fan of the films, even the fifth, that I know some people didn't care for, I've always enjoyed them.

It would upset me if someone watching a show was thinking about me, Milo, as an individual at the supermarket or at a concert, wherever, and they're not thinking about what the character is experiencing.

Sometimes you're working in highly emotional scenes and you'll get lost in the moment. You're having fun with your friend at work. It's an opportunity to give to them as much as they've given back to you.

An audience gets to hang onto the characters for the rest of their lives if they want. I think it's great that the fans do that. It's just not too practical for a man like myself because I have to move on.

I have a Crock-Pot, and I have an All-Clad slow-cooker - I have two different ones. The All-Clad is larger, for maybe a gang of people, and my Crock-Pot's a little smaller if I'm just making something for myself.

Share This Page