I don't deserve any credit for turning the other cheek as my tongue is always in it.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
The natural habitat of the tongue is the left cheek.
Not necessarily, a lot of my songs are firmly tongue in cheek.
My tongue is what I used instead of my fists because I was a small and cowardly young man. Amusing people with stories and being bizarre with words was my way of getting out of fixes.
I get accused of having a haughty smugness. I have a lopsided mouth. I can't help it. I was born with it. It looks as if I am smirking. I have had my publicist tell me, 'Don't do that smile on the red carpet.' I'm, like, 'That's my smile.'
When we, as humans, articulate, our tongues tend to hit the back of the teeth.
If someone is being very cheeky, it can be quite fun to deal with that situation.
People who know me know that there's a light-hearted side, humour... But you could easily say I am cheeky.
I think you have to have a sense of humor about every movie that you're doing. Your character needs to be relatable in a way that, even when you're doing the most bizarre things, sometimes a bit of tongue in cheek is necessary to keep up the believability of it.
With a woman of sophistication, class and modesty and refinement, I become a totally tongue-tied buffoon. I can't even look her straight in the face.
I've never felt that using something with tongue in cheek has been a bad thing.