The 'Moonlighting' tension of the couple that obviously never can get together, there's an innate sort of fun and tension in that.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
What I think I learned from working on 'Moonlight' is you see what happens when you persecute people. They fold into themselves.
I'm certain that most couples expect to find intimacy in marriage, but it somehow eludes them.
There's something about marriage that is not as intensely romantic or interesting as a couple's first meeting.
To me, romance and suspense go hand in hand. What's more suspenseful than wondering how two wonderful people can manage to get together in spite of the world going crazy around them?
It's finding time for each other. That's the trick to any relationship, you know. Finding time to really be present for each other.
Every time that you do a play or a show of any kind, really you have this family that you really build something with for a while, and then we all dissipate, but you always have that connection, that eternal kind of intimacy, you'll always have.
A romantic relationship requires honesty between a couple.
When two people in an intimate-couple relationship look at their interactions as opportunities to learn about themselves instead of change each other, they are infusing their relationship with the energy of spiritual partnership.
In a great romance, each person basically plays a part that the other really likes.
If ever a man and his wife, or a man and his mistress, who pass nights as well as days together, absolutely lay aside all good breeding, their intimacy will soon degenerate into a coarse familiarity, infallibly productive of contempt or disgust.