Sally field quotes
Explore a curated collection of Sally field's most famous quotes. Dive into timeless reflections that offer deep insights into life, love, and the human experience through his profound words.
It took me getting to my 50s before I could say "Whatever!" about other people's criticism, especially when it's not true.
I've had such an odd career.
People, I just want to say, you know, can we all get along?
I'm looking for a bunch of new tchotchkes that represent the new part of my life.
I am such a notorious hermit - almost pathological. And, I'm not a hoarder. But that's just a symptom of things that I do feel.
We just fight our way through it. But you can't just get up and walk out without repeating the behavior over and over.
I have never been beautiful in cliche terms.
I really have no ulterior motive in taking on certain roles. I have no larger issue that I really want to show people. I'm an actor, that's all. I just do what I do.
Louis Armstrong said you have to live a life. And that's right. If you don't live a life, you don't got nothin' to come out your horn.
I've had such an odd career. I always wanted to be a great actor. I wanted to be Katharine Hepburn - ish - there was a bit of nobility about her. Instead I've always felt like the mutt standing on the sidelines, panting and saying, "Me, too! How about me?" That's just part of my personality.
I came from a real working-class show business family.
In reality, people are people. Age does a weird thing to your body on the outside. It makes your face fall and weird things happen all over. But inside, you're the same person you always were.
What does the Academy Award mean? I don’t think it means much of anything.
I started to repeat to myself "If I'm not where I want to be, it's because I'm not good enough... yet." Which meant it was up to me.
You try to get rid of the things that are weighing you down.
I really like cable T.V.
I joined the Actors Studio and began to work with Lee Strasberg, and that changed my work.
The bad thing about being with an actor is that the role he's in stays with him all the time. The good thing about being with an actor - well, I can't think of any good thing.
I find that’s one of the great things about acting-you have the opportunity to stand in somebody else’s shoes. Each character faces a dilemma in her life, and as an actor you’re able to step into that character’s skin, look through her eyes. You leave transformed, a different person, because once you live a little bit of someone’s life, it changes you.
I haven't had an orthodox career.
Fear is where the information is.
My last son is leaving to go to college; my grandchildren are being born. My mother is living with me.
Don't you be afraid, sweetheart. Death is just a part of life, something we're all destined to do.
I can't deny the fact that you like me! You like me!
But there isn't any second half of myself waiting to plug in and make me whole. It's there. I'm already whole.
When I was born, the doctor looked at my mother and said, "Congratulations, you have an actor!"
To watch how lovingly your children parent their own children is to know profound achievement.
I MUST go to what desperately frightens me - the chance of failure.
I don't want to look old and worn, but what can you do? My real focus is being an actor. I care more about having the opportunity to play roles that I haven't played than I care if my neck looks like someone's bedroom curtains.
I so believe that older women have tremendous value to their families, their community, their country, the world.
But I was losing so much bone density that I would have been in grave danger. And I mean grave danger. If I had let it go just a few more years I could have broken my hip or spine just picking up my granddaughter
I certainly have a very colorful nature, filled with great highs and great lows... in my early adulthood I probably was grappling with some serious depression issues.
When you have kept yourself isolated, no one relates to you, you have no way of understanding actually who you are.
I've never had my heart broken.
I haven't had an orthodox career, and I've wanted more than anything to have your respect. The first time I didn't feel it, but this time I feel it, and I can't deny the fact that you like me, right now, you like me!
There were the days when women were under contract, and they were thought of as a commodity, so they hired the best writers and a lot of them were women at the time. This was in the thirties and forties, to make product for the people who were under contract, who were their assets to the studios. But that doesn't exist anymore - and as a result, the people who are in the industry write products that interest them.
I always wanted to be a great actor.
I was just lucky enough to grow up in a time when they actually had drama departments in schools.
I wanted to be Katharine Hepburn-ish - there was a bit of nobility about her.
Change is never easy.
All people want on this earth is to connect with others. Other than eating and sleeping. Human beings need to connect with other human beings. Otherwise, they lose their mind.
Don't think for one minute, whoever you are, that you're not important. You're so vitally important to stand up and be heard and do what it is you do.
You know, people really don't understand what actors do.
I've grown used to being lonely over the years, so I don't seek to change it. But aren't there many people who are lonely?
The whole world is waiting. The whole world needs you.
The people who stand on the sidelines and criticize aren't actually in the arena, spilling their blood.
When it came down to doing the nude scene, I couldn't hide how humiliating it was for me; I burst into tears.
Motherhood is given the brush-off in our society. 'Oh, I'm just a mom,' you hear women say. 'Just' a mom? Please! Being a mom is everything. It's mentorship, it's inspirational, it's our hope for the future.
'Forrest Gump' is filled full of moments where your heart just cheers.
I wouldnt mind having my heart broken because it would mean that I had that much feeling connected to somebody. And that would be really great.
I was raised to sense what someone wanted me to be and be that kind of person. It took me a long time not to judge myself through someone else's eyes.
I mean, the only thing that matters to me is getting to the work - getting to do the work. And I don't really care where it is: whether it's on stage or on television or in film.
I did comedies for 10 years and I learned a great deal.
Western Costume, and the old Universal wardrobe that is huge and they're getting rid of so much of it now, which is sad.
I'm an actor. I'm trying to be the character and do what they're doing.
I don't know what happiness is. I have periods of feeling joyous and peaceful and excited about what I'm doing, but I am also frequently very sad.
Never, ever, have I felt really accepted in Hollywood.
The opportunities I've had to play really complex characters - which haven't been a lot, but some - you never get over them.
It took me a long time not to judge myself through someone else's eyes.
Many people must have looked at my life and thought I was quite fortunate. But I felt lousy about myself - and as you now know, I didn't come from a place where I had a lot of self-confidence.
I didn't back into being an actor, I was born one.
When you're old, you are more certain of who you are, and that may be a good thing or a bad thing.
If mothers ruled the world, there wouldn’t be any goddamn wars in the first place.
I would take plays and I would cut out all the other dialogue and make long monologues because I felt the other kids weren't taking it as seriously as I did.
I think that's very sad, that I haven't allowed my heart to be broken. I have broken a few.
If you have the opportunity to play these characters that are three-dimensional and very deeply rooted in an emotional level, they stay with you. They lived in you anyway, the density of them. It takes a while to realize how they've influenced you.
I'm so vigorous, and I so take it for granted, because I've always been a real physical person.
You can't help but feel all the human-rights issues.
Get over it. Get on with your life.
I had to let my ego go a long time ago.
Quit thinking about your weight and start thinking about your worth and who you are and what you haven't done yet. What you want to accomplish.
And I realized that sometimes the greatest triumphs in your life come in on little cat feet and sit on silent haunches and it's up to you to see it before it moves on.
I never felt safe. In high school, acting is what I did to stay sane. It wasn't about showing off; it was about revealing parts of myself that I couldn't reveal anyplace else.
You may be a little older, or a little more neurotic, or a little more closed off. But inside, you're just the same.
You just do the best you can with what you've got... and sometimes magic strikes.
If I hadn't fought back, I might have been Gidget forever.
There are some actors who are my contemporaries who I think of as purebreds and I'm not.
I never really address myself to any image anybody has of me. That's like fighting with ghosts.
There are parts of me that I feel are beautiful, but they don't have anything to do with my nose.
I find that I'm not as worried anymore about what other people think. That's a comfortable place to be. And I'm starting to let go of the feeling that I need to push myself to do things I don't want to do - an impulse that has always been linked to the feeling that I'm not enough.
I think when you're reaching outside of something you're comfortable doing, you're just heading towards a light. I don't think you stop to justify it.
Acting has been my lover and best friend. My confidant and my tormentor. It has given me support and broken my heart and mended it.
My agent said, "You aren't good enough for movies." I said, "You're fired."
I'm highly emotional, so I'm highly aware of humiliation.
Last year I was diagnosed with osteoporosis.
There's always been a shortage of roles for three-dimensional women, no matter what age. If you look at the statistics on women in film, be they behind the camera or in front of the camera, and it's pretty nauseous-making. It always has been.
For almost every character I've played in the 43 years I've been working as a professional actor, I've found parts of myself. We are all bipolar in the tiniest essence of what it is. We are all multiple personalities, in a sense, and to be healthy mentally, I think, learning what those multiple personalities are and inviting them in your life is really important.
I think the first thing I did was several scenes from Romeo and Juliet.
There was really a snobbery from people in film - they did not want people who had come from television. It was the poor relation of show business, and especially situation comedy.
The roles... the deep roles that I've gotten to play have turned my course. They've changed my life experience.
Like a jerk, I went to a nutritionist and I ate the most repulsive, awful things. I didn't allow myself to eat chocolate cake and french fries and cheeseburgers.
I grew up in a show-business family, but we were working-class show business. There was nothing glamorous about it. You had great things one day and the next day, nothing.
I have a tendency to think of myself as the mutt of the litter. I'm not purebred.
I've never had my heart broken. It's a very sad state of affairs. I think everybody should have their heart broken. I don't think it says anything good about me at all.
I've done some good work and some not-good work.
Had there not been a Mary Todd, there would not have been an Abraham Lincoln. She found him when he was a young lawyer and really a bumpkin. No one knew of him, but she recognized his brilliance.
There are not a lot of places for an actor to explore what it's like to be a woman in her 60s. There aren't any films about it and there very few TV series about it.