I think so many doors have been opened for the gay community as far as the dangers and horrors of HIV. There is so much more out-ness now.
John Benjamin Hickey
I remember when I was doing 'The Crucible' on Broadway with Laura Linney, and Arthur Miller had been in rehearsal with us and was on stage on opening night. She turned to me during the curtain call and said, 'Let's make sure we remember this.'
So much of male heterosexual comedy can be steeped in a gay panic. A lot of juvenile comedy is predicated on that.
I went to high school in the 1970s and was a real daydreamer and not the best student.
I was not paying attention during physics in high school; I was wondering if I was going to be cast in 'Pippin.'
Actually caffeine is too hard on my system. I'm a delicate boy from Plano, Texas.
Your wife doesn't want to hear a word about how hot your mistress is, and vice versa.
Collaboration to me is... my favorite collaboration in the theatre is the collaboration between the actors and the audience because it's just that thing that happens when the only thing left that is left on the human scale is that human beings come to look at other human beings act out stories.
I was shooting the third season of 'The Big C' and doing 'The Normal Heart' at the same time on Broadway, and I thought, 'I'll never do anything as difficult as this.'
I'm about to turn 48, and I think that the closer I get to 50, the more I might be interested in fatherhood. But honestly, I'm not grown up yet myself.
I think, at the end of the day, if you're a good actor, then you're a good actor.
My neighborhood now is all 21-year-old European supermodels. I go to the international newsstand on the corner, and they're all looking for their pictures in 'Italian Vogue.'
There's an amazing documentary, 'The Day After Trinity,' which is crazy good.
We all have competitive relationships with our siblings.
Work is like a drug. I'm jonesing for more. It's gotten more addictive than I had realized. I get anxious when I have nothing to do now.
I've done a lot of Broadway plays, and I'm fortunate they've all been so successful.
One of the great joys of being an actor is you get to go back to school.
After you do a play like 'The Normal Heart,' it's hard to find something you feel so passionate about.
When I'm clean-shaven and bathed, I look like a lawyer.
The only advice I give to acting students is, 'Be nice to your underclassmen. You never know who might be in a position to help you get a job one day.'
Nobody wants to hear an actor complain about too much work - especially other actors.