Character contributes to beauty. It fortifies a woman as her youth fades. A mode of conduct, a standard of courage, discipline, fortitude, and integrity can do a great deal to make a woman beautiful.
Jacqueline Bisset
A mode of conduct, a standard of courage, discipline, fortitude and integrity can do a great deal to make a woman beautiful.
Ideally, couples need three lives; one for him, one for her, and one for them together.
Time seems to stop in certain places.
I love being in my garden. I don't plant a lot of exotic flora, but I do spend a lot of time outside doing manual labour.
The thing about anything in life is you have to get ready for it. Study, learn.
I work hard, and I tend to play hard. I very seldom rest hard.
Marriage has just never interested me.
At the time, 1980, people regarded actresses involved with production with a certain amount of fear, resentment and anger.
You need to become a good listener. As you're working, you hear someone else's lines and how you absorb them becomes your acting.
I'm a very nurturing kind of person and a sort of a homemaker. I'm just interested in things remaining fresh.
Some people have said that I haven't got the parts I should've got because of the way I look.
I am a great lover of art, in many forms: paintings, objets, textiles. I don't have the talent for painting, but I have a very good sense of colour, a love of visual beauty.
We all lose our looks eventually. Better develop your character and interest in life.
What I realized on the 'Grasshopper' was that I wasn't sure that I liked being in every shot. It wasn't fun.
There is an eternal humanity that crosses through all people, and it's more interesting often when it's about struggle - not people with champagne glasses.
I have emotional strings that tie me to Europe.
Your voice is your tool and represents you. It's very important to have a good voice where you can be understood.
I'm quite happy being myself. I'm a big fan of Jessica Lange and Jeanne Moreau, but I don't want to be anyone else.
When you share work, and you have the opportunity of seeing people you like doing what they do best, and you also interchange socially with them, it's very addictive.
When I am working on a movie, all I want to talk about is the movie. All I want to be with are the movie people. It's like a clan. If I'm asked to people's houses for dinner, I hate to go, because they'll talk about other things.
I was never any good in the school theatrical productions. I always got a role like the March Hare. A Latin teacher told me I might make a good actress, and that stuck in my memory.
I can't believe I've been doing it so long. In the last three or four years, I've slowed down. I'm doing only the roles I really want to do.
I went to see Oliver Stone's 'Heaven & Earth,' which I thought was a wonderful movie, but I walked out because I was so moved. It was too painful to watch.
I grew up in a small town about 40 miles outside London, but it was a fairly cosmopolitan household.
A Latin teacher told me I might make a good actress, and that stuck in my memory. I did some modeling, and Polanski gave me that small part.
At first I was always cast as the girlfriend. It was a long time before I got to play characters who were people.
Being around people with whom you feel a connection, on many levels, not just a professional one, is very relaxing. Your ears are more open to someone who is not a cantankerous bastard.
I could never have conceived that I would ever get to work in a Truffaut film. It was astonishing to me, and still is. I felt like an old pro, but it was still so unexpected.
I don't come in with any preconceived ideas, and although I will have done some preparation, I can go which way the director wants.
I have always watched the rushes, and have learned more because I have done so, because you can have all manner of ideas in your head, but they have to end up on the screen.
I have an intense obsession with making films. I not only love to make films, I perhaps need to make films.
I have never given up on men easily.
I have watched people who have nothing to do with the film business, but who have become part of the circle for a short period of time. They can be truly devastated when the film wraps and people leave.
I really feel that the talent I have is acting. Freedom and the possibility of play-that is what I like to have.
I think I am an adult.
I want to keep my attractiveness as long as I can. It has to do with vitality and energy and interest.
I was never any good in the school theatrical productions. I always got a role like the March Hare.
I went to the premiere of The Detective with Sinatra, and perhaps people jumped to conclusions. He was very protective towards me and never came on to me sexually.
I'd like to get my public image nearer to my reality. People have a lot of misconceptions.
I'm a perfectionist. I need to be needed. I need to do things for a man. But I don't need to do them as much, these days.
I've always loved men.
I've probably understood men too well. I realise they are predatory by nature, and I have a certain acceptance of the male animal.
My view is quite simple. When your dog pees on the carpet, you do not give away your dog. You say, This dog is special. I have to teach him not to pee on the carpet. I feel exactly the same way about men. They need to be taught things.
Not everyone likes watching rushes, but it makes me work harder, and I don't feel I am watching myself, but watching the progression of the character.
Sometimes you like the personal adventure implicit in the making of a film, and sometimes you like your part in a film, and sometimes you like the final result.
There's something about being with a group of people who become like family that must be needed in society.
This film business, perhaps more so in America than in Europe, has always been about young sexuality. It's not true of theatre, but in America, film audiences are young. It's not an intellectual cinema in America.
To be used in a part without depth is a frustrating feeling, when you know you have something to give.
Working with Candy Bergen was really wonderful.