It's definitely like being in some weird sorority. I'm friends with a lot of actresses, but my 'SNL' friends are my closest.
I have been a ballerina, a cheerleader and a sorority girl. I was the girliest girl alive.
It's just blind luck when a woman is born into a wealthy family and attends the best colleges and joins top sororities.
Being Jewish, you didn't get into a sorority. So I really was much more outgoing and gregarious. I really didn't want to spend an Emily Dickinson adolescence reading poetry on gravestones, which I did.
Hollywood's racist. Hollywood is sorority racist. It's like - we like you, Rhonda, but you're not a Kappa.
There can be no situation in life in which the conversation of my dear sister will not administer some comfort to me.
Sisters don't need words. They have perfected a language of snarls and smiles and frowns and winks - expressions of shocked surprise and incredulity and disbelief. Sniffs and snorts and gasps and sighs - that can undermine any tale you're telling.
When sisters stand shoulder to shoulder, who stands a chance against us?
I am the president of the sorority and I'm sure there are plenty of people I've pissed off enough to go on a killing spree.
Help one another is part of the religion of our sisterhood.
I can't say I was a very successful sorority girl.
I began to realize that this idea of the lighter the better and the darker the worse was really - had an impact on sororities, on friendships, on all sorts of things, and it was stunning to me.
I always thought that sororities were just made up of cheerleaders from high school. And I kind of picked on those cheerleaders!