I always try to find something to motivate me to be a better player.

It took me a few years to realize that throwing harder wasn't always better.

For me, suspense is always harder and better than going for the quick, outright scare.

I'm noise-sensitive. It's always better for me if things are quiet, so I can concentrate.

For me, it's always the same: worrying about how I can get better, the techniques I can do.

I've always been Ralphie, ever since I was a kid. My grandfather was Ralph. It suits me better to be Ralphie.

I always get less nervous when we get into rehearsals because it just gives me a better idea of how it's gonna go.

Every year is different. I always try to evolve, get better and find different areas and training that can benefit me.

I've always found, give me a pack of cigarettes and a couple of beers, and I do better with that than I do with torture.

For me, it's always been so obvious that the less we can edit our lives and more we show how normal we all are, the better.

I've had disappointments and heartbreaks and setbacks and roles I didn't get, but something always came along that either made me better or was an even better role.

I've got a chip on my shoulder, and honestly, I've always had it, but I don't think about it in those terms, like I'm trying to be better than this guy or that guy. It just helps keep me focused.

I'm never really just satisfied with where I'm at. I always just want to get better, improve more, learn as much as I can because obviously I have a lot to learn and a lot to get better at so it's all about improvement to me.

I played tennis. My older brother, Joseph, was a cello player, and I played the cello, but he was better than me at the cello, and he was also a better tennis player than me, so I was always like, 'I wish there was something that only I did!'

For better or worse, I've always been curious musically. Whether it's opera or Judy Garland or pop, I've deliberately sought those things out. I've never wanted to do the same things over and over. Some think I've accomplished what I set out to do, and others consider me a dilettante.

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