"I didn't prepare this very well, and so this speech will be brief and rambling. Thank you > Variety and Unite4: Good. I like what you guys talk about and creating generosity as a core value and about encouraging change and open-heartedness in your daily life. So, here's my daily life—today, I lost a friend. I lost a dear, young man in my life who was struggling with addiction and died, just a few hours before we came. Jane [Aronson] and I sat and talked about it. I'm sharing it with you because life and death live so close together, and we walk that fine line every day, and at the end of the day when things happen in our lives, we turn to people that we love, and we look to our family and our community for support, and we lean on people in a hope that they will ease our pain. And so I don't feel like telling any jokes, I'm kind of sad, and it's been really great to be here tonight and listening to all of you, to be inspired by all the work that you do, to be reminded of why we live in this bizarre planet called Hollywood. It's very strange. I feel like talking WWO, I feel like talking about the good work that they do, how they focus on trauma and loss, how they encourage children through play and sport and creative arts. I feel like talking about the toy libraries that they're creating, which if you get the chance to google WWO, World Wide Orphans, at any point tonight, it's just such a genius idea of these amazing libraries focused on the developmental ages of children…3-, 4-, 5-, 6-, 7-year-old children get to go in and play with toys like it's a library. These toys teach them motor skills and encourage their development, and these children don't have any toys. Zero. No shirts, no toys, no homes, no parents. And WWO is creating these toy libraries all over the world, and hopefully all over the U.S. because every child in every country deserves safety, food, clothing, and family. I feel not like telling jokes, but celebrating with you all tonight, and everyone who works at WWO and who keeps reminding me of this one basic thing: that we're all connected. Many people tonight have talked about how we all feel spiritually connected, and what I found to be the running theme throughout this room, is that there's these things that feel incredibly big to handle, and you just kind of get paralyzed by them. And as I said about Jane and about WWO, the orphan crisis seems insane. It seems like a tsunami. It seems unbearable and unfixable. And what Jane does and what WWO does, and what you've all done for me tonight, is remind me that when something feels really big, too big to handle, just go really small. Just go real small. Look at the person next to you, meet them, find out their name, change one person's life, make one call, write one letter, give one dollar. Whatever small thing feels like, it changes the course of the ship. That's all that it is."