A good place to start initially would be school plays.
But I just wonder what it would be like to be able to go places without people recognizing me.
Especially when you play a character for so many years, the character ends up reflecting a lot of who you are and I think I've changed a lot since then, but that represented a lot of who I was as a teenager.
I actually wrote a couple of pilots last year. One sold to ABC and one sold to CBS.
I am ashamed to admit I watch a lot of reality shows like The Osbournes and The Bachelor.
I am pretty much a sucker any really bad reality television.
I do like to hang out in the corner and keep my eye on the party, or be outside in a smaller group.
I feel like there is just as much violent programming in other countries and there is not the same incidence of factors. I think there are other factors contributing to violence in this country and not the media.
I flew back and forth and did episodes of Roseanne while I was at Yale.
I know that I want to do something that has both elements of comedy and drama and I know that I want to do a project that is film versus tape.
I like being any strong character I guess, as long as there is something definite to play. It makes it more fun to be an actress.
I like both, but there is something about comedy that is like so incredible - I don't know - there's something that I really respond to with comedy.
I like going to New York. I like the galleries and the theatre and the restaurants and bars and music. I think that city is more alive than Los Angeles.
I like that kind of frantic schedule. It makes me feel like I have a purpose.
I love working with Roseanne. She has a great spirit. She is really spontaneous and kind of fun. And she is caring.
I pretty much only write by default, because I want to make certain projects so instead of trying to wait and find them, I create them, but I'm not really a writer.
I think Drew is really light-hearted, really sweet, and really generous. Who she is as a person is way more important than who she is as a celebrity.
I think I really see myself doing TV more than ever.
I'd just love to have an audience and it's the most fun in the world to get a new script every week and have the audience come in, and work with those actors.
I'd like to do more stuff with less sarcasm.
I'm super shy, especially at parties.
My twin in the show is Molly Stanton who is so sweet and great and she is totally different from me.
No, I feel like my personality probably influenced the character, more than the character influenced me.
The best thing about being an actress is getting good concert tickets.
The last movie I filmed was High Fidelty, and it was about 110 degrees, so that was the focus.
Yeah, I started when I was 6 years old. My brother and sister would get all of these presents at Christmas time from the cast and crew of their show and I was jealous. So I decided that I had to become an actor.
You know what you are best at, and writing is just not my thing, but I like it.
In 1998, Sara Gilbert wrote and directed a made for TV movie called Even The Losers.
Sara Gilbert has won three "Youth in Film Awards."
In 1997, Sara Gilbert directed the movie Persona Non Grata.
In 1999, Sara Gilbert was the executive producer and star of The Next Best Thing, however it wasn't picked up by any networks and never aired.
In 1992, Sara Gilbert made her movie debut in Poison Ivy along side Drew Barrymore.
Sara Gilbert started acting when she was only six years old.
Sara Gilbert was supposed to appear in the 1999 movie Outside Providence, but her part was later cut out of the film.
Sara Gilbert's real last name is Abeles and she didn't go by Gilbert until her sister got her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Sara appeared on the Celebrity Poker Showdown on game four.
In 1998, the short film, Persona Non Grata, in which Sara Gilbert made her directorial debut and narrated, received critical acclaim and was selected for the line-up for screening at the prestigious Sundance Film Festival.
Sara played the part of Tina in Riding In Cars With Boys, in 2001.
Sara decided that she wanted to be an actress, when she watched her sister Melissa get her star on the Hollywood Walk Of Fame.
Sara Gilbert is a lesbian; she and her partner, writer and producer Allison Adler, have been together since 2002. In October 2004, Allison gave birth to their son, Levi Hank Gilbert-Adler. Sara is pregnant again and expecting another child in the Fall of 2007.
Gilbert is a vegetarian.