I'm hard on myself, so I'm working on shifting perspective toward self-acceptance, with all my flaws and weaknesses.
Gwyneth Paltrow
Taking care of yourself is being there for your kids, like how on a plane, they tell you to put on your oxygen mask first.
The adrenaline of a live performance is unlike anything in film or theater. I can see why it's so addictive.
My father, he was like the rock, the guy you went to with every problem.
The older I get, the more open-minded I get, the less judgmental I get.
I don't eat four-legged animals, but I eat birds, I eat cheese, I eat dessert. I eat everything.
When I pass a flowering zucchini plant in a garden, my heart skips a beat.
I try to avoid barbecue potato chips. They're my weakness.
Beauty, to me is about being comfortable in your own skin.
I am who I am. I can't pretend to be somebody who makes $25,000 a year.
I really like where Tony Robbins says that we're all hypnotized to see beauty this one specific way, and it's true.
We feel it's unacceptable to be fat, when it has nothing to do with who the person actually is.
I eat whatever I want. I like bread and cheese and wine, and that makes my life fun and enjoyable.
I'll take my wrinkles. I don't like the Botox thing.
Even actresses that you really admire, like Reese Witherspoon, you think, 'Another romantic comedy?' You see her in something like 'Walk the Line' and think, 'God, you're so great!' And then you think, 'Why is she doing these stupid romantic comedies?' But of course, it's for money and status.
I just had a baby. I'm not going to work unless it's something really special and meaningful, because I can't imagine missing all that time with my daughter.
I don't eat red meat, but sometimes a man needs a steak.
I spend a good portion of my dinner-party conversation defending America because no matter what the political agenda, it's still a fantastic, amazing place.
I love getting cookbooks - people will give them to me, and I read them like novels and file everything away.
There have been countless times where I've worked out with my kids crawling around all over the place. You just make it work.
Beauty fades! I just turned 29, so I probably don't have that many good years left in me.
It changed me more than anything else. You don't want to get to that place where you're the adult and you're palpably in the next generation. And, this shoved me into that.
My life comes down to three moments: the death of my father, meeting my husband, and the birth of my daughter. Everything I did previous to that just doesn't seem to add up to very much.
I wouldn't say I'm a very original thinker, but if I have a good experience with something, I'll want to take it further or adapt it in some way.
I do 45 minutes of cardio five days a week, because I like to eat. I also try for 45 minutes of muscular structure work, which is toning, realigning and lengthening. If I'm prepping for something or I've been eating a lot of pie, I do two hours a day, six days a week for two weeks.
I feel my dad, I still feel his love, and I still love him. I would do anything to have him back, but half the reason that my life is good, has real, true value, is that he died. I would obviously rather have him alive, but he gave me so much in his death.
We've got a wood-burning pizza oven in the garden - a luxury, I know, but it's one of the best investments I've ever made.
Creating a meal for my friends and family, sitting together, eating, laughing and talking - that is when I am so happy. Oh my God, if you could see how much food I make - I am the original Jewish mother.
I love being. There's so much wisdom in it. You wake up in the morning and you think, Hey, isn't it great just being?
I know people that I respect and admire and look up to who have had extra-marital affairs.
When I venture out to eat, I like to go to places with food that I don't know how to make. So my favorites are Japanese and Indian. Indian food has so much layering of flavor, and the dishes go together so harmoniously.
Sometimes when things you love get really commercial, you end up feeling betrayed by it.
I try to remember, as I hear about friends getting engaged, that it's not about the ring and it's not about the wedding. It's a grave thing, getting married. And it's easy to get swept up in the wrong things.
Women were real box office stars in the '40s, more so than men. People loved to see women's films. I think it was better then, except for the studio system.
When you're so out there in the public eye, people are constantly criticizing every aspect about you.
There's something that sort of weirds me out about actors who want to be rock stars, and the other way around too.
The Jewish part of me is superstitious.
My dad always said he couldn't remember a time when I did not want to act.
It's a waste of time for people to say things they think other people want to hear, or try and come off in a certain way. I try to be as honest as I can.
In the theater, you go from point A to point Z, building your performance as the evening progresses. You have to relinquish that control on a film.
If we were living in ancient Rome or Greece, I would be considered sickly and unattractive. The times dictate that thin is better for some strange reason, which I think is foolish.
I've had a very interesting career. I get to do amazing things and work with amazing people and travel and learn languages - things most people don't get the opportunity to do.
I'm an artist, and the need to get inside myself and be creative and be other people is a part of who I am. I don't imagine I'll abandon that completely.
I wasn't the high-school play queen or anything. And my parents would let not me act until I graduated from college.
I was having such a hard time when I made Sylvia. I gave everything I had for that role. It's one or two or three things I'm most proud of in terms of my work. But it was very dark.
I understand what it feels like not to like aspects of yourself. There have been times that I have felt really terrible about the way I look. I have the seed of that feeling.
I understand that if you set out to be a celebrity, then you asked for it, but all I wanted to be was an actor.
I say what I think, and I stand behind what I say.
I put on the fat suit and went outside and walked around. I was really nervous about being found out, but nobody would even make eye contact with me. It really upset me.
I moved to New York from California when I was 11, so initially I was seen as the California person for a while. I didn't feel like I was popular, but I did feel confident.