I studied Japanese language and culture in college and graduate school and afterward went to work in Tokyo where I met a young man whose father was a famous businessman and whose mother was a geisha.
I've always had confidence. Before I was famous that confidence got me into trouble. After I got famous it just got me into more trouble.
After 'Skins' I became mildly famous which was a bit of a disaster.
I hear the way people talk about the children of famous people. They're not treated very well. The presumptions are usually quite awful. So I tried to establish myself with a couple of movies. After 'Juno' I thought: 'I think I've defined myself enough as my own director that I'd love to work with my father.'
Dates with actors finally just seemed to me evenings of shop talk. I got sick of it after a hile. So the more famous I became the more I narrowed down my choices.
After a fellow gets famous it doesn't take long for someone to bob up that used to sit by him in school.
If there's anything more mortifying than being famous at 14 it's being washed up right after.
I put my money in the bank: I have to think of life after modeling when I'm not famous any more.
The importance of human life should be universally respected - and that refers to children before they are born and after. All children have the right to be brought up in a loving two-parent family where the notion of divorce is not even possible.
When I'm home the heart and soul of our family is in the kitchen. Growing up my parents both worked so dinnertime was for family - the TV was off. I think it's important to grab that time and really make it special even after a tough day.