[Corpse Bride (Sept. 23) With Tim Burton riding high upon the sweet success of] Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, ... The Nightmare Before Christmas. |
And trust. It takes a long time to trust someone. You work with people, anybody you don't know, it takes about a film's length to get to know each other. Then if you move on, you have to start right back at the beginning. But if you carry on together and try doing different things, you can all grow together. |
Conversations With Other Women. |
Corpse Bride ... The Nightmare Before Christmas. |
England's riddled with Lady Ts. A garden-loving upper-class lady of a certain age, |
He said, `I want her light, and I want her to have a purity and an innocence,' ... I analyzed the character and thought, because she was frozen in time, stuck, actually perpetually young because she was killed on the eve of her wedding, that meant a voice with a great deal of spontaneity, always so excited. |
He was very formal and serious, |
I drink a lot of Diet Coke and belch. I've been known to use the ''f'' word. |
I wish I could play puppets the rest of my life, ... You don't have to worry about hair and make-up. You're not trapped by your envelope. |
It's a bit of a shame, |
It's not for anybody neurotic, this stuff, |
Maybe from now on puppets can do the parts, |
Maybe from now on puppets can do the parts, ... They can fight it out between them. Lady T and Corpse Bride will maybe do alternate parts, and I'll just do the voices. |
My son is going through a Daddy thing. It's always Dada, Dada, Dada. I'm like, 'What about me? Mama! I carried you around for nine months.' What did Tim do? He just had sex with me. It was all fun for Tim. All gain. |
No, absolutely not. No, no, no. You know, [there's always] new things, too. Everyone's [wearing] skulls, and all that. But no. Nothing. |