I am, uh... a 6 foot tall woman, I feel like I'm a healthy size, I'm not anorexic; and I feel that people who aren't anorexic are punished... for not being anorexic.
— Kristen Johnston
I want to play a Disney villainess so badly.
I've always just gone with the best role, and I don't care if it's in theater, film or television.
I was born in Washington, D.C., and I was raised in Milwaukee.
But this show reminds me that there are other aspects to me besides the fact that I'm a funny chick.
To actually be allowed to be beautiful is a total first for me.
And to be different is great. You don't want to be the same.
It was only when I moved to New York that I realized tall is good.
I like people-watching and fading into crowds.
I think Janeane Garofalo is incredibly funny, and I love Dennis Miller.
If you love it, and work really hard at it, it will really happen, I believe. I'm living proof.
I spent 10 years in New York doing theater.
I literally felt like a freak, which is another aspect of the role of Sally that I relate to: total outsider.
Onstage, I was never the ingenue.
My way was not to be the petite, gorgeous, little cheerleader. My way of getting by was making people laugh.
I was such a dork. I was too big. I was really gangly.
I don't consider myself a goody-goody, but I like to be perceived as classy.
When you're that tall, people talk about it all the time.
I'm a strong person, but I'd never resort to violence.
I'd so much rather people think I was funny than pretty.
I was a full foot taller than any child my age.
May I say, if you were suddenly put into a woman's body, wouldn't you be slightly interested in your breasts, and why people look at certain parts of you, and why certain parts move like they do?
I was voted Biggest Ham and Likeliest to Become a Celebrity.
I really came out to L.A. to take the money and run.