Meital Dohan quotes:

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  • I also love a film by Ang Lee - "Lust, Caution."

  • I like to do variations of all kinds of different work. One of my roles in Israel was for the theatre - Romeo & Juliet. So from that role I went to - I was playing, I believe her name was Amanda in the U.S., on "Ugly Betty."

  • I really love Phillip Seymour Hoffman and Edward Norton. I also like Ryan Gosling and Rick Bentley.And of the girls I like Naomi Watts and Juliette Binoche, and I would like to work with...

  • I like "Talk to Her" by [Pedro] Almodovar and "Happiness" by Todd Solondz, "Mullholland Drive" by David Lynch .

  • Israel is not dangerous on one hand, but on the other hand it is dangerous. Human life is just dangerous, in general.

  • My role on "The Sopranos" was so small and I only had one day of shooting. I had fun that day because I met Michael Imperioli, who is a friend of Johnny Ventimiglia, and Johnny and me are close friends.

  • The new film I'm shooting in Jerusalem - which is partly why I'm here in Israel - is something I co-wrote.

  • Theater in Israel is not more dangerous than walking in the street.

  • However, obviously Israel is a much smaller place in terms of population. There are only 6 million people in Israel, where there might be 6 million people in one city in America.

  • I also like Juliette Lewis - I think she's great.

  • I believe life is destiny, and really the capture the magic of life, and the same for the magic in the disaster.

  • I kind of feel connected to all places at the moment, and I've done very interesting projects in both places (Israel and America).

  • I like to do projects that are off-the-wall and on top-of-the-wall.

  • In America, everything is big and more like a jungle.

  • I started acting when I was 13, but it really wasn't my plan. The actual decision to become an actor was when I was 17, after I didn't act for half a year because I came to an exchange student program in the US, and I realized how much I missed it.

  • And that's how show business is like in Israel - it's very, very small. It kind of feels like a high school environment, you know? Everyone knows everyone and if you come to Israel for a month, you'll meet half of the actors on different occasions - not to mention in the doctors office!

  • Human life is just dangerous, in general. You know, waking up in the morning, you could get hit by a car. Wherever you go, you could choke on a fish bone and die. You never know.

  • I always loved music, but it's not something I thought I was gonna approach on a professional level.

  • I don't really consider myself a writer, but I am writing so I guess I'm a writer.

  • I like to take on a different role every time or else I make myself bored.

  • I treat both acting and writing as a creation - writing is just another element or aspect of it.

  • I'm connected to both places because I already feel like New York is my home. But then again I feel like L.A. is my new home and Israel is my real home.

  • I'm very picky and I'm very critical.

  • Israel has the mentality of a small Kibbutz. Kibbutz is kind of like a small village that - actually there aren't many Kibbutz left in Israel - but it was something that was based on socialism and based on a principle that everyone is working for the Kibbutz and the Kibbutz is one.

  • It wasn't anything that I thought I was going to be - a singer or an actor or anything like that. I really started acting just because I loved it, and it was more from a need to act and express myself.

  • It's always nice to meet friends of friends.

  • It's the modern world, so it's pretty much the same. Everyone follows America, from all over the world.

  • The work on "Weeds" was wonderful! It was pure fun, from the people involved in the production to Jenji Kohan, who was the creator of the show, to Justin Kirk, who was my partner and who was terrific to work with because he's a great friend. The whole experience was just wonderful.

  • What happens in Israel, it's not so divided between being a film actor, or a TV actor - usually, we just do everything. I do theater, film, and television, and the theater is mostly financed by the government.

  • While I'm acting I'm focused on what I'm trying to say through the character. And when I'm writing, I'm just putting down on paper or on the computer what I have to say.

  • On a deeper level, I just feel like women have so many expectations they need to carry, so many different laws these days, and one hand they need to be sexy, and on the other hand they need to behave properly, and on the other hand they need to get what they want and take care of themselves.

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