Glenn Close and Mary Kay and I went to K-Mart to buy Halloween costumes because we were filming during Halloween.
I felt they had really moved the characters in a direction that was very interesting. The family had really felt the impact of what had happened to the.
I think I have been fortunate. I certainly have played mothers, but they are different kinds of women in different situations.
I think there's a danger of a being typecast as the all-American mom forever.
I wanted to play the part that Mary Kay played, the lawyer who wanted to have baby and felt her clock ticking, because it was something I could relate to.
I was concerned about doing a sequel and repeating myself. That was before I read the script.
I would like, certainly, to do different things.
In the first half of the first movie, you saw a family basically in very good shape dealing with extraordinary things.
It was my first scene in any movie and my only scene in Kramer vs. Kramer. I was petrified.
Larry Kasdan wanted us all there, all the time, even if we weren't filming.
Teaching creativity to your child isn't like teaching good manners. No one can paint a masterpiece by bowing to another person's precepts about elbows on the table.