I grew up in a house full of faith, and my mother died when I was a little girl, and I found comfort in my faith.
Being a mother has been my greatest teacher and also the most self-sacrificing thing I've ever done.
A guilty conscience is the mother of invention.
My mother is Lithuanian Australian, and my father was born in Singapore, but he is Pakistani / Saudi Arabian.
I didn't start grieving for my mother properly until I was maybe 16.
I am a simple, ordinary mother.
Motherhood is exhausting, but you get to know the deeper ramifications of it as you go along.
I'm kind of like both of them: My mother grew up wanting to save the world, and my father grew up wanting to rule the world.
Diane von Furstenberg is an extraordinary woman. She's modern. She's a mother, a grandmother, a leader.
My mother is Bosnian. Obviously I understand the language. Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian, it's all the same.
I'm not saying my mother didn't like me, but she kept looking for loopholes in my birth certificate.
My mother and father were lovely parents, always quite hard up, but very hard-working.
My mother has battled breast cancer three times.
Ever since I was a little girl, I always loved fashion. I would watch my mother get dressed and suggest things she should wear.
Both my brother and mother are actors and dancers. Of course my mom, who is a Kathak exponent, is the most established dancer amongst the three of us.
I have three wonderful siblings, and we all pitched in equally to help our mother.
I am scared of becoming a mother.
I'm never proper or careful, but I never curse in front of my mother, either.
Acting and modelling are good, but motherhood is what it's all about.
I was conceived after doctors told my mother she'd never have children. I'm a miracle - we all are.