Although I am not a big country music fan, Willie Nelson's "TEATRO" is insanely good. You don't have to like country to love this album.
Clearly audiences wanted something younger and more reality based. "Three" was fun, but it is simply a different genre.
Frankly, I thought the idea was fun and sort of campy, but it also raises some interesting questions. What would the world be like without any men? What would it be like if heterosexuals were discriminated against?
I guess I'm not that aware of such a big fan base. I have a few core people who write me no matter what I'm doing, but I hardly have sacks of mail being dropped on my door!
I had the trifecta of bad apartment luck. I lived in a subterranean apartment with the feet walking by. It was very depressing, Laverne and Shirley style looking up at the feet.
I haven't really had that many opportunities to play "lead" so I guess I jumped at the chance. I have also never done any "sci-fi" projects and thought it might be fun.
I live alone with my one dog and they say it like it's a sad, it's a terrible thing. this woman lives alone with her two cats.
I met Clinton at a benefit for teachers, which was a very good charity, but I met him for about 90 seconds, and I thought it was important to meet the leader of the free world. So I stood next to him for a photograph, and then apparently that's all it takes.
I mind the characterization of me. They say that I live alone with two cats, for instance and I think that that is code for, like, man-hating spinster.
I play a scientist in a futuristic world in which 99% of the men have been wiped out. As a result, the women are nearly all homosexuals and the children are cloned.
I read books more than I go out. As a matter of fact, I get a little concerned about some of my anti-social habits. I will choose a night with Somerset Maugham or Russell Banks over a crowded bar any day.
I've had a little bad, bad media luck the new year. Well, apparently I'm dating bill Clinton, which makes me nervous. I didn't know, though.
I've loved doing "E.R." for the quality of the writing and the great people I get to work with.
It's a war of attrition. If you have patience and a modicum of faith in yourself your chances are not too bad.
It's global warming, right? But if I see a polar bear like coasting down the Hudson, I'll start to be really concerned.
Maybe if they had left it on longer it would have had greater success, but you can't mandate what people watch. Besides, that Pacey kid is cute. Who am I to argue?
Strangely, however, my favorite guest spot was probably my first "Class of '96." It was the first time I knew definitively that I wanted to keep acting.
The people who support me seem to like it when I play sassy and "un-girly" characters. Just as a footnote: Fans are good.
The wolf was sick, he vowed a monk to be - But when he got well, a wolf once more was he.
Julie is expecting a child in the spring of 2007.
She says that she is nothing like her character on "Boston Legal," Denise Bauer. "Not even vaguely. I'm continually concerned about what other people think of me," she said in an interview. "It's fun, though, because it's all in the writing and you just take a breath and jump."
She made her film debut in the independent movie "Five Spot Jewel" before graduating from Brown University.
She initially thought about becoming an artist before trying her hand at acting.
She attended the prestigious Roland Park Country School in Baltimore, Maryland.
She plays Sarah, the wife of Jack Shepard on the hit ABC series "Lost," in flashback scenes.
She speaks Italian fluently.
She graduated from Brown University with a B.A. in Italian Renaissance studies.
Her older sister Molly is an interior designer in Los Angeles.
Her mother is Susie Luetkemeyer.
She is 5'6" tall.