Heather Graham

Heather Graham
Heather Joan Grahamis an American actress. After appearing in television commercials, her first starring role in a feature film came in 1988 with the teen comedy License to Drive, followed by the critically acclaimed 1989 film Drugstore Cowboy, which gained her initial industry notice. She then played supporting roles in films such as Shout, Diggstown, Six Degrees of Separation, Swingersand in the television series Twin Peaksand its prequel film Fire Walk with Me, before gaining critical praise in Paul Thomas...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionMovie Actress
Date of Birth29 January 1970
CityMilwaukee, WI
CountryUnited States of America
I guess you just feel like there's a whole story that's not being told in movies. You're only seeing the macho guy version of a story that from the woman's side, may be completely different.
Bad dogs, she believed, were like most bad children: created by those around them. But then, that was a personal opinion.
I basically think that I'm a fairly nice, normal person with just a few eccentricities.
It hurts so good and I feel euphoric after . . . yoga people on a whole are super cool and everyone is there to work on their own thing.
Courage is being afraid - and going ahead, anyway.
Lord knows---and we both know --- that too many wrongs have been committed in the name of religion. ... But you're not here in the name of religion. Religion is an organization. Faith is within. ... Catholic, cattolico--- it means universal. Too often we forget that.
There are idiots in every crowd.
The world is not always ours to understand....
I think people underestimate the romance audience. It's everything from career women to high school girls to elderly women. I have male readers, too, especially for the Civil War books.
I can always track my career by the children - I started writing right after the 14-year-old was born, and sold my first book just in time to pay for the birth of the 12-year-old.
enemies are created, not born ...
I always feel a responsibility to the people I write about. I feel obligated to portray them in the way they feel is proper.
With historicals, the research is half the fun. Contemporaries are especially easy. People are right out there in front of you; you meet them every day. You can concentrate wholly on the story and characters.