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I've been working some really long hours for the last five or six years. Anybody who works on series television knows, and especially women because women spend probably two hours more than the guys with all their hair and makeup crap. (unknown)
If I were attacked, I would turn around and attack back. I have to go through it each time, figure out which way to go. (unknown)
If you watch the show and the characters don't look at each other while they're talking, the actors probably aren't getting along. (character)
In terms of being a role model, I didn't start out to be one. I don't go to work every day with that in mind. But, I do get a lot of fan mail from young girls. (character)
In the beginning, people think vulnerability will make you weak, but it does the opposite. It shows you're strong enough to care. (unknown)
It always bothers me when I see actors who just succumb to that hierarchy and think that there's something grand and glorious about doing movies. (movies)
It doesn't help anybody to put out a bad script. (unknown)
It's all about exploring the more unpredictable aspects in the character, not just fighting people. (people)
It's ingrained in actors and actresses to always want something different, and it's ridiculous. You see it almost all the time. (acting and actors)
It's part of the job to compensate for outfit. (unknown)
It's so much harder to memorize dialogue that isn't the language you speak every day. I think of people who work in a medical series; it's probably harder for them too. (work)
It's the Marvel world and Marvel's making all kinds of movies, but I don't think Marvel will be making Mutant X. (movies)
Karen and I, we have that whole sisterhood thing and we're both complete goofballs. We're the anti-divas. We're having fun and we love to goof. (unknown)
Linda Hamilton is my hero. She was so tough and so strong and so vulnerable at the same time. I think that's what woman action figures are allowed to be: vulnerable, in a way that women are. (heroes and heroism)
Most women don't play like guys do: they don't wrestle, fight, get into brawls. They don't know how to express themselves in a physical, active way. (women)
MUTANT X is a little closer to my heart because it's a little closer to reality. As an actress going to work every day, it's just easier to tap into something that feels more familiar. (acting and actors)
My first paying job, when I was 15, I was a day camp counselor. (job)
Neither one of us have a dainty laugh, so there's just peels of laughter coming from the set all the time and I love that. I love it, love it, love it, love it. (laughter)
People get on a show and they fought tooth and nail. Almost 95% of the actors out there want to be on a television series. Then as soon as they get onto one, no, no, I want to be a movie star. This television series stuff, no, no no. (acting and actors)
That's the thing with sci-fi and action roles. You have to play the danger as real. If you don't, you end up with egg on your face. You have to commit. You can't think about how stupid it might look without the special effects. (acting and actors)
The audience can see female vulnerability in this action role. If you take my last two roles, Sarge had very little vulnerability. She was like a machine. When they came to me with Shalimar, she was Sarge-like. (audiences)
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