I'm pretty lucky. I don't get too many haters.
Religious humor is not really my area, so I probably wouldn't do anything about that, or politics or something.
Like, Australians definitely don't walk around dressed up in blackface going, 'Ha-ha.'
I'm not a big fan of 'Jersey Shore' and those kinds of shows where people are really playing up to the cameras.
People think that I'm some kind of genius who's got these statements to say, and... I'm not really.
There are bits of me in all my characters.
Fans feel they know me, so they want me to be on-the-spot funny, and it's hard to fulfil their expectations.
I get bored with the constant probing for the cliched tears of the clown, the dark side of the comic.
I was sure 'Summer Heights High' would be a cult ABC thing; I had no idea it would be such a big hit.
I'm not really a management-type person. It doesn't suit my personality to be bossing people around.
I didn't do very well academically; I was always in the bottom class.
I think my parents had a hard time dealing with me.
I have a massive guilt thing about money.
I feel like I'm so normal. So normal it's boring.
People are always nice; I never get anything mean said to me on the street.
I would love to play a British character one day. My accent wavers between Scottish and Irish very easily, though.
I just do what I think is funny and what's exciting to me.
I like the boundaries, the kinds of conventions of a documentary and having to work within that.
I'll probably be still playing a school girl when I'm 60.
I get asked to do stupid things like panel shows and talk shows and things.
I've met big-name actors doing Hollywood films, and they've said that all they want is an in at HBO and their own show.
I never like to think of any character as being over. I'm always thinking of different ways of bringing them back.
In Australia, I'm built up as this comedy hero, which was never my intention.
I find myself believing everything that journalists tell me.
You feel the pressure of going to university because you need a back-up plan, which is why I enrolled.
I went to a private boys' school, and we had girls in the last two years.
I think after doing a few shows now, people are ready to put me down.
If you over-think, it affects things too much; I work instinctively, like painting in a way. Think too much, and you ruin everything.
I find actors a little bit too self-conscious.
I've never been a 16-year-old girl.