I'll try anything once.

Women have been kicking ass for centuries.

Don't we all just really try to fake it well?

I pretty much make time for that weekly manicure.

I hope I don't just sit around moping for two years.

I never worked less than 16-hour days on South Beach.

I love old movies. The '40s theatre pace is fantastic.

My taste in music and entertainment is quite eclectic.

People just kind of associate me with kicking some ass.

To say I'm the easiest person to live with would be a lie.

I dig science fiction, though it was never really my thing.

I've always played strong women who are doing their own thing.

Yancy is actually a Native-American name, but I'm Irish. Go figure.

I am so happy to be on a show with writing I wanted to participate in.

I've spent a lot of time and money trying to keep my anger in control.

I'm just an actress. They try to give me as little information as possible.

Once you get into a part, and someone sees you, you get asked to do it again.

I grew up in Greenwich Village. Dad was friends with John Lennon and Yoko Ono.

My junior high was dreadful. I see a lot of my fellow alumni on America's Most Wanted.

I think seeing some of the past can be helpful, especially if you're into crime solving.

I can be extremely vulnerable. People are tough on me because they think I can handle it.

A comic can be aesthetically beautiful. I think they captured it beautifully and accurately.

I think sometimes women who are supposed to be strong are also written as mean and vindictive.

My father used to sing to me in my mother's womb. I think I can name about any tune in two beats.

My grandfather was a cop in Long Island. I often try to draw on things that I've heard about him.

I don't know that I'd necessarily want to see into the future. I don't want to know what's happening next.

I'm open to sci-fi, but I was never a diehard fan. I have no idea why it keeps following me. I'm extremely lucky, I guess; it's a lucrative venue.

My mother's side of the family was in the production side of theatre. My grandfather, Jose Vega, was a general manager for Neil Simon shows on Broadway.

Whether it goes to series or stands by itself, I'm proud of what we did with it, not only from the standpoint of what it could have been, but for itself.

I had to skydive for the movie and I was terrified. Like everybody, I thought it was going to be one of those experiences that changes your life. It didn't.

I'm the oldest 26-year-old I know. A lot of experience has been crammed into a short amount of time. Some days I feel a good 65, 70. Like I want to lie down.

Imagine if it happened to you: All of a sudden you find this thing on your wrist and people are telling you it has powers. I would be a little skeptical myself.

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