I like work; it fascinates me. I can sit and look at it for hours.

I can sing, but it takes an incredible amount of work for me to sound acceptable.

It's a constant quest to push the bar and work in films that allow me to prove what I can do as an artist.

I can carry a brand. I did it in the UK with an entire brand basically built around me, and my in-ring work speaks for itself.

I often joke that I straddle psychosis and neurosis, and that being an artist keeps me in the middle, so I can work between the two.

Nobody has approached me about an offer to work in India. However, I can categorically state that if they did so, I would refuse immediately.

Everyone knows how much Australia means to me. I try to get back here as much as I can, but normally it's for work, so I'm in and out and jetlagged and stressed.

I really appreciate artists of the 20th century, and I can see a lot of their influence on my work, but to suggest that my design only fits within an 'ism' kind of bothers me.

I don't need to tell any one of you guys that I can do what I can do. I'll just show it to you guys, and if you want a little sneak peak, come watch me work out. That's how I do my thing.

There is such a cliche to certain roles that all I can do is to try to make them realistic and work for the times, and so the audience actually won't see me as a caricature of something, but rather as an actual person.

In my early teens, I was working in a Wimpy Bar and delivering cab company cards to make cash. I also ran a tuck shop at school. I struggled academically because of being dyslexic. When I saw other families and what they had, it inspired me. I thought, 'I can get that, too, if I work hard.'

Share This Page