I am the luckiest actress on the planet.

I eat very clean, not in an exaggerated way.

I love spaghetti and meatballs... I eat a lot.

Overcoming my shyness has been a lifelong struggle.

People always ask me, how do you do everything you do?

I occasionally buy a bikini, but I'm too shy to wear it.

I somehow instinctively knew it would be much better to win.

You know what my greatest personal stumbling block is? My shyness.

I use Neutrogena makeup off wipes to take the first layer of makeup off.

I drink hot water and lemon - after two cups of the coffee in the morning.

My grandsons really love my apple cake, which is from my grandmother's recipe.

I think we all cheer for couples who just seem right together and go the distance.

I do crunches to keep those abs going strong and flat. I'm not a sedentary person.

When someone has that combination of arrogance and ignorance - that drives me crazy.

For most of my adult life, I drove through Central Park every morning going to work.

With 'Dancing with the Stars,' they miraculously send your dance teacher with you wherever you need to be.

Erica Kane was a spectacular role for any actress to play, and I felt so lucky to be the one who got to do it.

If your skin looks okay today, and you take care of it, there's a good chance it's going to look good tomorrow.

I married somebody who is very secure. He's been in my corner from the time we met, and we grew in this together.

It is hard sometimes to look into the future, you never know what twist and turn the school of life is going to take.

I grew up loving Broadway musicals. I'd put on my parents' cast albums and stand on the stool and sing in the mirror.

Before I was working out, if somebody told me that I would actually choose fruit over french fries, I would never believe them.

It took awhile for me to get used to speaking candidly about my own life. I got into it, and it turned out to be a wonderful experience.

Life goes on, and I'm moving on to the next thing, but I hope the soaps that are still running will thrive. They have millions of loyal viewers.

The sense of acting being teamwork was a mentality that I took from school: I studied with wonderful people, and I wanted them to be proud of me.

I started doing Pilates when I was in my mid-40s. I thought it was called 'pie-lattes' because I didn't hear anyone talk about it; I just read about it.

My parents were both from extremely different backgrounds. My father's Italian, my mother was of Swedish descent. They're both first-generation Americans.

I want you to know how I feel about my Italian heritage, so I'd like to say a few words in Italian: Verdi, Pavarotti, DiMaggio, Valentino, De Niro, Giuliani. . .

I really always felt that I was going to be an actress. I had a lot of confidence in the fact that I would do well from a very early age. I didn't know how tough the business is.

My father was an ironworker who eventually co-founded a construction business. My mother, Jeanette, was a stay-at-home mom who had been an operating-room nurse until my older brother, Jimmy, was born.

You don't have to get doughty or, suddenly, because you have a new label on you, 'Oh, I'm 50, so therefore, I have to be a certain thing.' Follow your heart and look at your rear view as well as your front view!

I was a shy little girl. Growing up, I was often content being alone in my room, making up stories, and acting out all the parts. I became so good at it that, with the door closed, my parents thought I had friends over.

I married young. I had an instinct that this man was going to really wear well, and he has. For me, this is what worked. I always admired Helmut because he was, A, very smart, B, very sure of himself and very, very funny, and so that combination of things.

The 'All My Children' studio was near Lincoln Center, and I used to see all the ballerinas and the dancers, and I thought, I don't want to bulk up; I want to have long, lean, toned muscles. And I found out that through Pilates, you can achieve those strong, lean dancer muscles.

I was nominated for a Daytime Emmy Award 19 times before I won. The first nine years, I heard someone else's name called; after that - I think it was a protective thing - I didn't hear whose name was called, but nobody was making eye contact with me, so I knew that it wasn't mine.

In 1949, when I was 2, my family moved from Yonkers, NY, to a development of brick houses in Elmont, a Long Island suburb of New York City. What I remember most about the house was the glider on our porch. I used to sit there evenings close to my father, Victor, as he talked about the moon and the stars. He taught me to dream big.

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