But it took me awhile to figure out Christine at this age, you know.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
But I've always believed that Christine Cagney shouldn't be played past a certain age.
I really think that 'Christine' is one in a million in terms of independent or studio.
And they were writing scripts where Christine had hit the glass ceiling. And I always thought Christine would never hit the glass ceiling. I thought her dreams would take her. Maybe her dreams wouldn't take her where she wanted, but she still had her dreams.
Years on, Christine and John still have a deep love for each other, as do Stevie and I - we've been working together since I was 17.
They used to say I was a younger Winona Ryder and that always made me laugh because I'm three years older than she is.
Christine Brinkley, that's my age range of supermodels. That's on my radar. This isn't someone where I don't know who she is. She turned out to be such a bright light. She walks into a room and just lights it up. She's just that person.
But it's a Broadway show, so even if you're Christine in Phantom, you're still a princess. All female leads are princesses whether they're Disney princesses or not.
Christine and I haven't raised our children. A whole community of selfless Christians has contributed to helping them become faithful, competent adults.
The way they were writing Christine as this older woman who got married, which she shouldn't have. Obviously got divorced right away. Reached the glass ceiling in the police precinct. So there is a part of her that died because she knows she couldn't go any farther.
Well what do you do with a character like Christine Cagney and you tell her she can't have things?