Every family has differences.

I believe that 'ego' is much overused term.

I don't do a film with which I myself won't be happy. More than believing in the script, it should be fun shooting it.

I do have certain people whom I want to work with. The kind of people I want to work with won't cast me on the basis of my hotness in the songs.

Theatre is difficult. It's not that I'm afraid of doing 'one takes' or shots, but it's about being able to live one character for several hours on a daily basis!

I am a very zone-specific person. For example, if I put all the pieces of a puzzle together, it's done, so there is nothing to look forward to.

I have always been a person who does things differently.

I would rather do four films and be remembered for them than do 20 forgettable ones.

I am not a conformist.

I would love to do regional cinema, provided the role is exciting enough and artistically challenging.

We can't say whether a film will be a hit or flop. There's something which just clicks with people.

When you have been persistent for as long as I have been, you have to exercise a certain amount of caution, but I want to do everything.

I do not like to go to the gym; I am more of a nature person.

I think when you exercise in open spaces, it kind of detoxifies your body and gives you peace of mind.

You put me on a treadmill, and I will run away, but you take me out on a beach, and I can run for an hour.

I love to work out under a clear sky with lots of fresh air purifying my lungs.

I think people love to watch me on screen, not my acting talent.

With 'PKP,' I did not own the film.

I remember the first time I saw 'Gupt,' I was blown away.

Every filmmaker has his own vision, and when they write a film or characters, they see certain people in those characters.

If you fall off a horse, you get back up. I am not a quitter.

I think it's very healthy to spend time alone. You need to know how to be alone and not be defined by another person.

I'm pretty low-key; you'll often find me in jeans, a T-shirt and sweatshirt.

I used to experiment all the time with my hair color.

I have very high standards for every part of life - my work, my relationships, food, love. I can't just pretend.

My parents were journalists and friends with writers, artists, and just a really interesting assortment of people, so I was exposed to all lifestyles from a young age.

People think that young people don't care about things, but I think they do care; they just aren't super interested in conforming to what older people think are the right way to do things.

At the end of your twenties, you realize you are inherently flawed, and that's great, and that's what makes you dynamic.

It never occurred to me that some people were seen as wrong or even different.

The mark of a good marriage is partnership and continuing to feel inspired by your spouse. I had that with Tao. But the end is not necessarily the tragedy. Staying in a relationship that is no longer working is the tragedy. Living unhappily - that's the tragedy.

Only the really young are fearless, have the optimism, the romanticism to take unimaginable risks.

I'm a natural blonde, but I feel like a brunette. I feel like people treat me now how I should be treated. People used to be shocked, when I was blond, that I wasn't stupid.

I love yoga and hiking - I think that's the perfect combo.

I think that women are more sensitive to emotional infidelity than men. I think men are more scared of physical infidelity.

I shaved the back of my head once and did the asymmetrical hair.

My parents said marrying was an optimistic thing to do in pessimistic times.

If I'm left high and dry at the end of this wild journey, just taking it is a great feeling.

Once, in Australia, I ate 33 pancakes in 20 minutes, and I only did it because they said a girl could never enter the competition.

I use the PhotoReady Foundation almost every day, and their lip glosses are fantastic.

I am a big music nerd.

I actually happened to be in Haiti right before the earthquake in 2010. I was there already with the organization I work with now, Artists for Peace and Justice, visiting the primary school that I had adopted, the Academy for Peace and Justice in Port-au-Prince. I came back, and within days, the earthquake happened.

I love eye makeup. I really like doing a cat eye, playing with liquid liners and different colors of liners, like emerald and deep blues, combining them with black.

My dad is Irish. I spent my childhood going back and forth between Ireland and America.

I went through a phase when I was 13 where I would only fall in love with people over the age of 19 or 20. I never had a real relationship with any of these people, but it was definitely the guy I wanted to hang out with and wanted to go on trips with. I would be like, 'But, Daddy, he's a musician!'.

I think what ruins relationships and causes most fights is insecurity.

I am so saddened and grossed out by young women who look like creepy, old aliens because of their new Barbie noses and lips. Is that a smile or a grimace?

I fell in love with theater there, and after graduation I moved to Los Angeles to pursue acting.

A lot of people assume that women of a certain age who are not unattractive have no excuse for not having a perfect life. But you can have emotional baggage that is dragging you down like cement blocks tied to your feet.

People assume actresses are afraid to get older; the truth is the roles get a whole lot more compelling once you're too old to play dumb.

As you get older, you start to really ask questions like, 'Is this the road I should be walking down?,' because every decision seems more final, as you get older.