In work, never have any regrets and always leave everything on the field.

I'm probably the most pessimistic actor I know. I'm always sure I'll never work again.

I have always said, 'Never stop work.' Continue work and sort out issues simultaneously.

I never have any clothes to go out in, because I always just buy for work. I don't know why. Habit.

I've never been antiregulation. I've always believed that raw, unregulated capitalism doesn't work.

There was always this idea that I would work on Shakespeare and some of the other classics, but it never came to be.

I think Joan's advice would be: always know more than anyone else, always be discreet as possible. And never cry at work.

I always wanted to work with Spencer Tracy, which never happened, although I knew him well. And I never worked with Cary Grant.

When we're not shooting 'Ballers,' we're always on the hunt for other work. As actors, we've never satisfied with just one thing.

I never want projects to be finished; I have always believed in unfinished work. I got that from Schubert, you know, the 'Unfinished Symphony.'

By and large, I think that comics work seriously hard. Many have other jobs as well, plus you never really switch off, so you're always working.

I'm always fascinated by the 'who would you like to work with' question. I've never really had an answer; it only really comes as you work with them.

When I left Maine, I always wanted to be a working actor. I never cared too much about being the star. I just wanted to do the work and get on with it.

There's always going to be a ball up in the air, and what I try to do is make sure that ball is never the kids. If that means sacrificing a social event or having fewer work commitments, it's worth it.

I tried singing. I tried playing a musical instrument. I really wanted to be a musician, but I never could quite pull that off. I liked entertaining, but I was always drawn to some kind of technical work - some kind of honest labor.

Acting is something that I always wanted, but I never paid attention to the notion that it might actually work out. You have all sorts of ideas about what you want to do - at one stage, I wanted to be a jockey - but this is the one that's a big deal.

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