I know there's Botox and all these skin-firming treatments, but I'm afraid they'll make me look weird.
— Sutton Foster
One of the things I admire most about millennials is they celebrate individualism, and their singularity is encouraged. To be different is to be cool as opposed to weird.
I'm like a little Pollyanna. I look at the world with rose-colored glasses.
I feel incredibly passionate about 'Bunheads,' but the network was not supportive of the show, and you have to have that.
Coming from the theatre, I have played some fabulous characters where I get to wear gowns, and I get to be a princess or someone from the 1920s, or I get to wear showgirl costumes. I'm used to wearing a wardrobe that changes how I feel. It's a bit of an outside-in approach - so often, the clothing can reveal so much about a character.
I think of fitness as being about heart health and staying strong and agile. That actually makes me go to the gym. I used to hate it, and you couldn't drag me there, but now I can't stand it if I don't go, which seems weird.
My No. 1 piece of advice, especially for someone who's an actor-singer-dancer - a triple threat, they're called! - people say, 'What's the most important?' I always say acting. Without knowing why you're singing or what you're singing about, it's just noise. And without knowing why you're moving your body, it's just flailing of arms.
My brother is about six years older, and I've always looked up to him.
I used to cross-stitch because my mom cross-stitched.
So I'm studying ballet every day and really training so people will see me as a ballet dancer, which no one's seen before.
I'm single. I just moved to a new city. I'm sort of starting over. I'm in Los Angeles. I don't really know what my life is right now. It's not what I thought it'd be at 37, and I think a lot of people can relate to that.
It's weird to have leisure - to have time off. I'm not used to it.
I grew up sort of a geeky, tall kid, and I think I was always the one trying to make my friends laugh.
I was a very outgoing, gregarious, full-of-energy kid.
I'm a fan of originals and classics, but I'm also a fan of new ideas.
I'm incredibly hopeful - in many ways, still very naive. I think a lot of that has helped me. My sort of naivete has sort of gotten me in trouble at times, but I haven't stopped myself from doing things.
I was so grateful to work on 'Bunheads.' We had so much material, and everything was so rapid-fire, and I developed - through theater too, I developed a really great work ethic. I think preparing for both of them is just that - you come to set ready to go, ready to play. You know your lines. You're ready to work.
I try to have a very optimistic outlook on life. I try not to take anything too seriously. I try to - and I do - find a ton of joy and happiness in my life, and I think that helps you stay youthful.
I'm a T-shirts, sweatpants, and jeans kind of gal; I dress really simply and comfortably. But one of the things I love about being an actor is that I get to wear amazing costumes.
One thing I think I'm really proud of is that I started taking care of my skin at a young age.
Every character I've played is goofy, but it has to have some type of reality.
You can't be afraid. You have to be open. I feel like I've always been a leaper, and I've always leapt into things without thinking.
I think Amy Sherman-Palladino has a very specific voice; it's unlike anyone else on television.
I started dancing when I was four years old and then was in class until I was about 20 years old or so, and then primarily was dancing just in shows that I was doing, but not really studying and training.
I'm used to working hard. Theater can be very grueling, and that's all I've ever known. It's what I've done for 20 years, which is crazy.
I only tweet about food and silly things, but it's really fascinating because I get a lot of response on Twitter, and I'm always looking at the type of people who write me on there, and it is such a variety.
And, as an adult, I tried skiing, and I ended up in tears.
I'd had the theater background for so long that I know that world inside out; I just didn't know the pace of how a TV set works, like how a show shoots.
When I was growing up, everyone dressed the same. You had to have bootcut pants and chunky heels.
I've been, like, 15 my entire life.
Amy Sherman-Palladino and Dan Palladino gave me such a gift with 'Bunheads,' and to give me this gift of going on 'Gilmore Girls' was beyond. It was awesome.
I think a lot of your 20s is trying to figure out who you are - you're on your own; you've got you first job. You've got your first apartment. You're living away from your parents. You're just discovering who you are.
I really do believe that youth comes from how you look at the world.
I don't deny myself anything - I do whatever I want in the moment - but I feel like moderation is the thing that can really sustain you for the rest of your life.
There's a reason I'm on a show called 'Younger,' because I still think... in every aspect of my life, I'm five or 10 years behind in my mind.
I have my little craft bag that I bring with me to set everywhere I go.
Ballet is an incredibly difficult, beautiful art form that takes a lot of training, a lot of time, and a lot of hard work.
I loved New York, but I never quite felt like New York was my home either.
I've done some TV and I've done a lot of theater, obviously, and the last character I played on Broadway was a very fast-talking broad. I'm used to learning material and words.
I think everybody has something that takes them away or makes them happier. To some people it's baseball or sports or knitting or the movies.
I don't think of myself as a dancer. I think of myself as a singer-actress who moves really well.
Well, I was such a huge fan of Amy Sherman-Palladino and of 'Gilmore Girls.'