Everyone gets lucky for some amount in their life. And the question is, are you alert enough to know you're being lucky or you're becoming lucky?
I think trust is the most important thing. If the actors and the director and the crew trust each other and you set up perimeters and boundaries, you give everyone space to do great work.
If you're lucky enough to be raised in a rich family, good. But learn how to respect that luck. It's not a given, you know? It's not like, 'Well, it's normal'. No, it's not normal. It's lucky.
I've been lucky enough to fly to space twice.
My father is a taxi driver, and my mother ran a small business. I hadn't even met a barrister before I got my first shot at the legal profession. But back then, I was lucky enough to be given a break - I can't help but wonder if I would be so lucky today.
Not everyone deserves to be a musician, you get lucky enough to be one.
I'm lucky enough to do what I like for work - not everyone's that fortunate.
If you haven't given them your trust, you haven't given them enough.
If you're a person and care about other people - I don't think I have any sort of special understanding or anything, I think any feeling person would experience similar things if given the same opportunities to see the things I've been lucky enough to see and meet the people I've been lucky enough to meet.
Not everyone is lucky enough to understand how delicious it is to suffer.
I was lucky enough to be the lady that was asked to be Maria in the Sound Of Music, and that film was fortunate enough to be huge hit. The same with Mary Poppins. I got terribly lucky in that respect.
I always say everyone was lucky enough to be in a Cate Blanchett movie.
I gauge if I can create a different a woman. But sometimes, you feel the character isn't given enough space to perform.
There is enough space for everyone in the Tamil industry and it is free of politics.
Anyway, why would you trust anything written down? She certainly didn't trust "Mothers of Borogravia!" and that was from the government. And if you couldn't trust the government, who could you trust? Very nearly everyone, come to think of it.
Belief is invisible, so there is enough space for everyone's. Except in the shops at Christmas.