I like seeing someone that can sing jazz and then flip over and sing a pop song and then sing a rock song.
Just speak your truth, it's an important cornerstone of how your life ends up sort of unfolding in front of you. Even if it's painful, if it's honest, it's going to bring you to the place you deserve to be.
I feel like I'm on the precipice - just seeing a better version of me coming out.
Music is catharsis for me.
The earliest issue I can remember going through was body image issues. I was a chubby little kid and I got made fun of for it. I dealt with horrible, horrible self esteem issues, and I still struggle with that. I think it's what taught me a lot of empathy and compassion, though, but there are those days where I look in the mirror and I still see twelve year old fat Sara.
I definitely get a little antsy when I haven't had a good fix!
My proudest moment of my career was opening night in Cambridge and watching the cast take their curtain call. No one was looking at me, and I was floating off the ground. It was just euphoric.
Late night writing is also good, too, but in New York, you've got neighbors. I try to be a good neighbor.
I have found so much joy and so much pride in contributing and being a team member, and then stepping back and watching someone else get the applause. That has been really satisfying in a way that I wouldn't have probably imagined.
I love the morning time. There's something about having the day in front of you.
I have a tendency when I feel myself getting stuck, my impulse is to go to my cupboard and find chips to eat.
If I get frustrated, the first thing I'll do is get up from the piano - completely mindlessly - and walk over to the cupboard and pull out something salty to eat.
The music industry can feel wonderful, but it can also feel very cold.
I love the morning time - a cup of coffee and to sit at the piano, that's probably my favorite time.
I think we're at a really rich and fertile time in the zeitgeist about paying attention to diversity of all kinds - racial diversity, gender diversity, making room for a continuum that is more inclusive.
The theater community at large, I have to say, has just been so warm and so welcoming, and that's not something I'm as used to.
One of the wonderful ways to celebrate women is to hire women.
I work a lot with men, and I work with wonderful men that I absolutely adore, but it's something that I'm now paying attention to - to seek out and make room for the talented women in all the technical fields and creative fields across the board.
I think that's my hope for a lot of the feminist movement is that the gender thing sort of stops being the selling point, if that makes any sense. We're just people making art, and that's how this process has felt to me.
The most powerful place you can come from is just having a really deep knowing of who you are and what you want for yourself.
I'm happy to be working with all women.
I am passionate about young women and advocating for them.
It's very exciting to be a part of a team of collaborators in general.
I can very much relate to waking up inside of your life and saying to yourself, "How did I get here?"
The struggle is to stay present enough when you're taking your next step forward that you're really making your most honest choices.
Follow AzQuotes on Facebook, Twitter and Google+. Every day we present the best quotes! Improve yourself, find your inspiration, share with friends
or simply: