I think it's healthy to hate. I think it's extremely healthy, because
without hate, you cannot see love. Without red, there wouldn't be any
green. That's not a very good metaphor but, you know, it's the same.
You and I have different definitions of deep.
When you've done something for a really long time you start to find out things about it that you've never imagined. It's like a complex molecule. And if you go to Oxford and you become a scientist and you start studying the molecule and at first you have a discovery about it. And at first you are like "oh yeah I've figured this out." But if you study it long enough, you realize that there's an entire universe in there and no matter how long you live, you will never stop figuring out things about that molecule. And I think that it's like that with things in our life.
And when the bottom drops out from underneath us in life it's miraculous how we're reminded that we are spiritual beings, that we have a soul; this immense, powerful being inside of us that's so much more than a collection of thoughts or ideas or things or people around us. That it's kind of this unbreakable, immeasurable force that's unexplainable and uh, it's reassuring.
One of our goals as actors, well, this is my theory, is to allow others to project themselves onto us whether it's good or bad.
You don't really comprehend how much those goals or those dreams are just ideas in your head. They are not real places where you can inhabit. A dream is a great thing but it is not an end thing. It is just another step.