Very often some of the religious miracle plays you see on television can be very corny, I find. And so simplistic.
When I'm at home in Virginia, I become more hermit-like. I like my own home.
Look, Hollywood's a mecca, but it's not the final answer. If you pick up a camera anyplace in the world, you can make a movie.
I always thought of myself as a later bloomer, so I like some of my work more later than earlier.
I love working in Texas anywhere.
When you dance tango fast, you have to think slow.
What drives me is I love my profession. I love to do it.
My uncle always said that I could have been a rancher.
You have a little bit of feeling for everyone you play.
Around my own friends, I like to mess around.
Spending two years on my uncle's ranch in Montana as a young man gave me the wisdom and the thrust to do westerns.
A young actor once asked me, What do you do between jobs? I said, Hobbies, hobbies, and more hobbies.
From the cradle to the grave, I always figure that we all have our individual journeys, and maybe my journey was a positive one and I accomplished certain things without stepping on too many toes.
Hollywood is still the mecca for good or bad, but it isn't the beginning or end for filmmaking.
One thing I like about Argentina, they only cook with salt; that's it.
We all have a cradle-to-the-grave journey to make and, in between, what do you do? There's got to be something hereafter.
There's a lot of ignorance in our business... Everybody's an authority. To have your own vision is rewarding.