Jul 30, 1963 - Present
Her role as Phoebe on NBC\'s Friends (1994-2004)
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I'm the youngest in my family, and everyone is very funny, and I was always trying to keep up with them. I just loved making people laugh
One fantasy is that I just do a Don Roos movie every year if that's possible. If he'd have me
Shirley MacLaine said, You're so funny, then gave me a hug. Everything went white. I couldn't hear, I couldn't see. I thought I was going to pass out
Since I had the baby I can't tolerate anything violent or sad, I saw the Matrix and I had my eyes closed through a lot of it, though I didn't need to. I would peek, and then think, oh OK, I can see that
I actually made an effort to reject acting, to shove it out of my body, because I didn't want my kids to have an actress as a mother-to have, like, a silly person.
I wanted to be the kind of woman who would attract a certain kind of man that I could respect. That was my thinking. It had to do with the kind of couple I would be a part of.
At 45, you know what you're doing, but you're still not done.
I just listened to that inner voice. By the way, it's always a good move to listen to that inner voice... if it doesn't lead to a crime
I do like reality shows, and I watch some of them because they're high drama. It's also just fun to watch people have honest reactions.
I've been careful to keep my life separate because it's important to me to have privacy and for my life not to be a marketing device for a movie or a TV show. I'm worth more than that.
I've learned you can make a mistake and the whole world doesn't end. I had to learn to allow myself to make a mistake without becoming defensive and unforgiving.
You become a celebrity, not because of your work or what you do, but because you have no privacy.
We wanted to do a woman on a reality show because that's what's happening right now-it's part of our culture.
We treat sex so casually and use it for everything but what it is-which is ultimately making another human being with thoughts and feelings and rights.
Watching a person lose their dignity used to be uncomfortable, and now it's an expected part of the program that we're becoming comfortable with.
Shirley MacLaine said, You're so funny, then gave me a hug. Everything went white. I couldn't hear, I couldn't see. I thought I was going to pass out.
One fantasy is that I just do a Don Roos movie every year if that's possible. If he'd have me.
On network TV, I'm still Phoebe to people, and it would be hard to convince them otherwise in the bright lights of a sitcom.
My hair got lighter, and I gradually went blonde. I liked it. Had more fun. But my image of myself in my head is this dark-haired person.
I'm the youngest in my family, and everyone is very funny, and I was always trying to keep up with them. I just loved making people laugh.
I'm pretty middle-of-the-road. There are some issues I'm more conservative on.
I'll accept being Phoebe to people for a while longer, given how much fun it was. That's totally fair.
I'd played dumbasses a lot. On Mad About You, I played a very dumb waitress and they saw me.
I knew an actor's career goes up and down and back up again. Your standing in this business can't be your whole identity; otherwise, you're doomed.
I have no affectation when I speak.
I found the right man, got married, and just had to keep not reinventing myself, just deciding that it doesn't matter what you are if you are a good person.