For premieres, you get designers offering to dress you for the evening, which is nice.
In England, there just isn't that fascism of beauty and physicality or whatever. You don't have to look like a gym bunny, all buffed up and a size two. You're not judged the way you are in the States.
When I was pregnant, I did Kundalini yoga. It was all closing your eyes, dancing around, and putting your hands together to form birth canals for people to pretend to be a baby coming out.
I have a computer and an iPad, but I have no interest in Twitter.
In America, people come up and to me, and I keep thinking they're going to say, 'Oh, I loved you on 'ER.'' Now it's, 'Oh, I love you on 'Doctor Who.''
'Doctor Who' is really challenging and fulfilling on so many levels.
I normally have a healthy fear of journalists.
If anyone out there wants me to play a Pre-Raphaelite character, I'd do it in a flash. That's what is so curious about my playing a modern doctor. It's not the sort of part I saw for myself when I began acting.
To be honest, 'Doctor Who' fans are a mixture of crazies plus solid citizens, but they're relentless.
Cleopatra is one of the roles that I would love to do!
It's so important to spend your free time with little people. They grow up before you know it. Childhood is gone in the blink of an eye.