I was confirmed at my prep school at the age of 13.

I always put on M.A.C. Prep and Primer before anything.

I'm so OCD about prep work and learning lines and stuff.

From a producing standpoint, I think prep is everything.

I'd never taken an SAT prep course. They were for weaker students.

I went to prep school for one year in Arizona. It was called Orme.

There'll always be that prep in me that I can't seem to get rid of.

I learned a lot about the prep Monday through Wednesday with my coach.

I channel a lot of my own personal relationships anytime I prep for something.

After my second year in the NBA, my prep years, my college, I hadn't really found myself.

Thugs Of Hindostan' involved a lot of prep to be able to make the character look effortless.

I grew up playing field hockey and lacrosse - prep school sport - and I was terrible at them.

For me, meal prep is about doing the work when you have the time, which is usually on the weekend.

I had gone to a Catholic prep school where everyone was rich and having kids by the time they were 30.

I walked onstage in a play at prep school, and with childish naivete, told myself, 'Wow, I'm an actor!'

From the time I start prep to serving the food at the table, I like for the whole thing to be beautiful.

I remember seeing 'Dead Poet's Society,' and it made it appealing in a way that I actually went to prep school.

Because I did well at the prep school, I got to have more options as some different universities gave me offers.

I think that with beauty, people jump to the end instead of starting from the beginning with a good lotion or prep.

Fight prep, boxing, cardio, stretching. It's almost like dancing, you have to learn to dance and keep practicing it.

I always thought that a prep school was what some people went to after high school to prepare themselves for college.

I went to prep school, Eton and Oxford. When people hear that, they think they know you, and you think: 'No, you don't.'

John Kerry only went to prep schools because he had an aunt who had the money to pay for his way into those prep schools.

I was a hostess, a waitress, a cafe manager, and a prep chef. For one job, I had to wear a hat shaped like a head of garlic.

I basically went from finishing 'Venom.' I had a week off with my family. And then went straight into prep on 'Zombieland 2.'

I developed my armour at prep school. I was the smallest guy in the school. I got bullied a lot. So I developed broad shoulders.

I have a very clear vision as to what I want at the end of my prep, and then I throw it out and let the creative process take over.

I'm the sort of actor who doesn't really prep a lot - I don't do a lot of research for parts. I just go for it, and I usually pull through.

I treat it just like a workday. When I'm training, I'm training. When I'm not, I'm not. And when I'm not in fight prep, we have fun weekends.

In another life, before taking the veil of journalistic purity, I practiced the black arts of a political operative, including 'debate prep.'

You know those hard days you go home where you've been worked to the bone and you just want to do nothing? In fight prep, every day is that day.

I'm all about time management. I have gotten my makeup prep in the morning down to, like, four minutes. There's just not enough time in the day.

I just never want to be in this situation where I get to set and they're like, 'We rewrote this scene, you're now naked.' I need a little prep work.

I get horrified when I have to do table reads with the whole cast, because there's a lot of stuttering coming from me, so I have to do a lot of prep.

Anybody that comes in, a new person is supposed to spend six months downstairs in the basement doing prep work. I didn't. I got on the line right away.

When I went to prep school in New York City, I had to ride the subway and learned how to do homework on the train. I can work and read through anything.

I have been rather selective, doing not more than two or thee films a year, so that leaves me with plenty of time to prep for my plays and theatre activities.

We record when I have a hole in the schedule. Sometimes night, sometimes afternoon, sometimes morning - we fit it in when we can. I prep for episodes all the time.

The first two pictures I did, I played a young student in prep school. When I did Lifeguard, everyone was saying, You're so Southern California. It was a surprise to me.

'Boardwalk' has kind of exposed me to a different demographic. And it upped my skills in terms of the speed with which I can prep a scene, and I'm excited to apply that.

The 1,000 tasting portions were to be served over a period of six hours, starting at noon, so we would have to prep those another way, to keep them as fresh as possible.

I first decided that I wanted to act when I was 9. And I was at a very bizarre prep school at the time; to say 'high Anglo-Catholic' would be a real English understatement.

It's hard to prep a movie in five days and shoot it in five days and cut it in barely any time. You don't get quite enough time to make the thing, let alone tell the story.

In high school, AAU, even prep school, I didn't really know how to play basketball. It was kind of like, 'Let's throw the balls out, go get buckets, just score, and go play.'

I came from a prep school in New Jersey, so I get that when I got to FSU, some people weren't sure about me - I didn't play in Florida or Texas or at a powerhouse high school.

To try to be at once a Lithuanian yeshiva and a New England prep school: that was the unspoken motto of the Maimonides School of Brookline, Mass., where I studied for 12 years.

You have to be sharp when the camera's rolling. I want to be totally unselfconscious, like a child playing. I do as much prep as possible so I can lose myself for those seconds.

For the 'Try' video, I didn't prep or starve myself and over-exercise. And then I didn't get my nails done. I didn't get my hair done. I didn't get a facial. I didn't have a stylist.

Charter opponents often try to delegitimize strong testing results like those in Boston by attributing them to excessive test prep - as New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio did recently.

I was given a lot of homework: I had to practise ironing as a synth, practise washing up as a synth, cooking a meal as a synth. It's definitely the most prep I've had to do for a role.

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