David Attenborough's 'Life' series is phenomenal. He's a wonderful modern soothsayer.

I'm a terrible cook but I wish I wasn't.

Yeah, I talk to everyone. I think that's the secret, you know. Keep it friendly, keep it warm. People just want to connect, don't they, at the end of the day?

I just love being in the middle of nowhere.

There's a difference between loneliness and solitude. You pursue solitude, I think. But loneliness is a completely different isolating thing.

There's still, dare I say it, a cultural propaganda against the Irish, that we are, as women, 'feisty.' I hate that word.

True Dare Kiss' is a gothic drama about a highly dysfunctional Mancunian family who, after 20 years, reconvene for the funeral of their father. I wanted to play Phil because I really liked the character, and there is an element of mystery about her - which I can't reveal.

I'm not a football fan, and not remotely interested in it.

Spending time away from family during filming, I think, for every working mum is always difficult. But it has to be done; there's no way round it you've just got to do it.

It makes a lot of people cringe, the idea of being a team player.

Sometimes, people are attracted to each other without knowing what or why or when it happens.

Getting pregnant proved to be a hell of a shock but it's really exciting.

I will always worry about where my career is going and am I any good.

I think I've got some actor's form of ADHD. I just can't do the same thing day in, day out.

I am quite a mercurial person.

I can be a totally different person from one day to the next, so it is difficult for me to stay in one role over a prolonged period.

I mean, the human race wouldn't continue if anyone told you how hard it is having kids, would it?

As a chind in Dublin, I can remember having my plate piled high with four or five vegetables - and I'm convinced to this day that my mother's home cooking helped to ward off illness.

When I was about nine, I was rushed to hospital to have my appendix removed. Like any child, I was more concerned about missing out on having fun with my friends than my health.

I moved to London when I was 18 to develop my acting career, but I still love going home to Ireland to recharge my batteries.

There is a wealth of fabulous actresses in England.

I actually thought it was quite nice to feel that I could legitimately take up extra space and not have to apologise for doing so. It goes with the territory and I think you have to embrace your pregnancy otherwise you risk having a terrible time.

At first I didn't want to get involved with another actor. But Rupert is a lovely man who is clearly a great dad.

A lot of first-time mothers worry about how they will cope. But I'm more patient than I thought I would be even though there are good days and bad days.

Los Angeles is not going to be a big naive step for me. I know it's tough out there, but I do think there's a place for Irish actors in that market.

I really want to get into feature films.

I think if you contribute to a job, and it's repeated and repeated, and sold over the world, and the producers are making millions, you should benefit from it.

I used to be nervous about not working and so would work for the sake of it.

My Irish identity is important as it's a part of who I am.

When growing up, there were never any conversations about the past, because if you don't ask the questions, you never get the answers.

The thing that strikes a chord with me... as a mother... is to think of my 17-year-old son fighting would be just terrifying.

I just really wish I'd met my grandfather.

I was a product of the late '70s and early '80s, so when we think of how we're so protective of our kids now, it's sad in a way. I guess what I'm trying to say is that we limit the development of our kids in a way.

I'm not a religious person at all.

I know that people in the public eye are always being chipped away at by very cynical attitudes in the press.

The very nature of acting is one minute you're up and the next you're down; one minute you're in favour and the next you're forgotten. You go away and you come back again.

Twenty or 30 years ago, certainly when my mother was my age, I'm sure she felt things were pretty over for her. You had your kids when you were 20. You brought them up. They left home. Then what do you do? While I feel genuinely optimistic. Well, I have no other choice.

I feel better now at 38 then I did when I was 17. But then, when I was 17 I did have the attitude of a 40 year-old.

I grew up with pretty much nothing - in the hood, the ghetto - whatever you want to call it.

I love the work, love the grind. I love what I have to go through to get what I want.

My mom said it's always positive vibes. I love good vibes, and that's what I get off people all of the time. That's what I want to give out to other people is those vibes and to have hope and dreams and to build that confidence and be encouraged to do whatever they want in life if they put their mind to it.

I'm self-motivated. I'm motivated for myself to be the best I can be - for me to do that, I have to have my own motivation, my own positive energy.

Depending on who we're playing, it's just kind of, like, a little starstruck. You know, because these are guys that... I'm playing against Tom Brady or Russell Wilson, Andrew Luck, guys like that that I've been watching since high school, that's been doing crazy things.

Between lunch and dinner, I try and snack on fruit and granola.

I have some muscle on me where I can take those hits.

When I'm on the field, I'm locked in, focused on my job. I try to have a positive play and try to get points on the board.

When we get in the red zone, we have the mentality that we're trying to get points. We're not satisfied with three points. We're trying to get touchdowns each time we get in there.

Clemson was the best three years of my life.

You correct the mistakes, and you move on.

No one can beat Momma. She made me the person I am today - the way I think and act and move and talk and speak. It's all because of her.