I think nerves are part and parcel of working as an actor. You can either work against them or you can embrace them, and I very much embrace them.
After 'Versace' and 'American Horror Story,' if that was the end of the line, then I can go happy.
I grew up in a very small country town, so I was exposed to horses at quite a young age, but I used to cry and run; they seemed so powerful and so unpredictable.
I've known since I was about six that I wanted to be an actor, but I grew up in a very small country town, and it was just not something that was possible.
I'm a very positive person in my life. I'm very optimistic.
With 'Versace,' after I had gotten the , it was two weeks of preparation before I started filming, and I had read Maureen Orth's book; I had been able to get a hold of photos and really start to inhabit the mind of David Madson.