Sandra Oh
Sandra Oh
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NationalityCanadian
ProfessionTV Actress
Date of Birth20 July 1971
CityNepean, Canada
CountryCanada
sexy support dresses
With small breasts, you don't have to wear a bra with dresses that have some support. It feels sexy without one.
crazy house should
You should see my house. It's sort of explosive. Like a crazy person lives there.
boys years careers
The beginning of my career was so brilliant. It wasn't until ten years later that I went, 'Oh, that was a big, fat fluke and, boy, was I ever lucky.
couple challenges therapy
If you have ever been to couples therapy it's really, really challenging.
fashion exercise individuality
I'm not a slave to fashion; I'm into exercising my individuality.
hbo lucky wanted
I was lucky on 'Arli$$.' I basically got to do whatever I wanted because HBO is great for that.
thinking television want
I think the roles in television are better for women right now. At this point, I don't want to continue doing the same things I've been doing in film because it's very limited.
thinking healthy challenges
I think all women should learn how to strip. It's a really healthy, extremely challenging thing to do.
waiting-around years play
I can get a better role in TV and work more constantly than I can waiting around for my friends in Canada to call me every four years - which they do - and I go up there and play a leading role.
strong rejection actors
We actors, we're a fragile bunch, and yet we need to be strong because 90% of our lives is rejection.
parent goes-on asian
In many Asian households, to not go on to higher education, that's like a big no-no. I know my parents' discouragement was for my own protection, and I'm really close to them now, but they didn't understand that there is value in this. That's because they didn't know.
writing thinking people
People ask me what I'm writing. They think I'm Sandra Tsing Loh. Or they ask about stand-up. 'No, that's Margaret Cho.' I really think there is this kind of glomming, that they think we are somehow all the same person.
kitchen together equal
And on a Canadian set, everybody is equal. You get paid the same. You live together in barracks. You have a communal kitchen. You buy and cook your own food.
moving choices yang
Sometimes the future changes quickly and completely, and we’re left with only the choice of what to do next. We can choose to be afraid of it, to stand there trembling not moving, assuming the worst that can happen or we step forward into the unknown and assume it will be brilliant.