◄ Laura Linney ►

Quotes

A lot of what is publicized now is really pretty trivial stuff - you know, what I eat for breakfast, where I have my pedicures, questions that I just cannot for the life of me understand why someone would want to know that.

A magnetic personality doesn't necessarily indicate a good heart.

All the things that most kids hated, I loved. I loved that things were asked of me and that, much to my surprise, I was able to do them. I loved the 10 o'clock bedtime. I loved the responsibility.

At school I was always trying to con my teachers into letting me act out book reports instead of writing them.

Cancer is so much bigger than a TV show.

Comedy is a way to make sense of chaos. It's a way of dealing with things that are overwhelming, that threaten you; it's a way to survive and get closer to the truth.

Courtroom dramas can be boring.

Doing the right thing has power.

Fame didn't happen to me in my 20s, it has been a gradual thing which probably makes it easier to deal with.

Fear, anxiety and neurosis: that's just in the suitcase when you're an actor.

For me to have the opportunity to stay with one character for, God willing, a long period of time, is really exciting.

History's a resource.

I always laugh to myself when I listen to some really big A-list star saying that they are just a normal person.

I am very aware that playwrights, particularly good ones, have a intention for everything they write. Language and punctuation is used specifically, and most of the time actors can find wonderful clues about character in the rhythm and cadence of the language used.

I am very lucky, because for the most part people are very nice to me, and I am still able to go about my life and ride the subway and all that.

I believe that no matter what you do in life, if you learn the basics through theater, it will help you in everything else - problem solving, communication, discipline, all of that stuff.

I can scarcely stand to have a manicure. I have to have them because you don't want to look like a disgusting human being - it's self-care and it has to happen, but I get very restless.

I certainly didn't have a nanny.

I could have gone to the gym for three hours a day and bought into all that, but I just wasn't interested.

I crave a cone of silence every once in while.

I don't consider myself a celebrity and I don't consider myself a star.

I don't think I'm exactly gregarious, you know. I'm not usually known as the loud person in the room.

I don't think you should exploit your own pain.

I don't want to spend my life in my 40s feeling bad about being in my 40s, and then all of a sudden I'm 50, and I will have missed a whole decade!

I enjoy learning about different periods and people, and then taking what's universal about the human condition and seeing where it matches up. No matter where you are, certain things unite everybody.

I find the whole disdain for ageing crazy.

I get cold - really cold - when I travel.

I grew up in Manhattan and, since my father was a playwright, all I ever wanted to be was a stage actress.

I grew up in Manhattan on the Upper East Side.

I had a good imagination and I still have one; a child-like imagination that hasn't gone away.

I had learning disabilities, and I couldn't express myself in the written word.

I have a bag with a toothbrush and toothpaste and all the things I might need during the day. I call the bag my trailer. Sometimes you don't have a trailer, so that's my trailer.

I have an instinct to want to be part of a group of people. I feel safe there. That's why I was in school for so long.

I hope that anyone I worked with wouldn't exploit our relationship.

I just have to concentrate on doing what I do.

I just want to say, 'Go work! It doesn't matter what it is. Work begets work. Just go!'

I love 70's music.

I love to work in all sorts of different situations.

I love working closely with people.

I mean, the idea of losing a parent is really inconceivable. I think there's just an undertone of dread about the subject, so people don't talk about it and don't prepare for it.

I tend to make low-budget movies but, yeah, I make more money than I ever thought I would make.

I think everyone's experience with a terminal disease is so deeply personal and unique to the person, the context in which they're living and the relationships that they have.

I think the way we talk about cancer has really evolved. I remember the way my grandmother used to talk about it, like a death sentence, no-one would even mention the word.

If there's one thing that I've done on purpose it's to take whatever job, so long as it's interesting and challenging, whether it's theatre, radio, TV or film.

If you have two parents who have to work, who want to work, you need to have someone to guide your child.

I'm absolutely doing what I enjoy.

I'm lucky because I don't like being in the sun a whole lot, just because the repercussions for me - I feel it, I go very red.

I'm noise-sensitive. It's always better for me if things are quiet, so I can concentrate.

I'm not someone who likes to have my picture taken, let alone see it plastered all over the place.

I'm sure my father had more to do with my career than I would like to give him credit for. I would love to think it was all me!

I'm very hard on my bags because I tend to carry a lot of stuff with me.

It is always good to explore the stuff you don't agree with, to try and understand a different lifestyle or foreign worldview. I like to be challenged in that way, and always end up learning something I didn't know.

It's always nice when you do something and it's well received as opposed to the other way which God knows happens to everybody. When the good times come around, you take a deep breath, appreciate it, but not take it too seriously.

It's very hard to put forth a film that's about love and the joy of love and for it not to be patronising and not make people nauseous or make them roll their eyes.

I've always thought that I'm sexy in my own right, but not in a way that people thought was bankable.

I've seen the greatest actors in the world, transcendent talents, who can't find a home.

Just because you're not famous, doesn't mean you're not good.

My castings sort of go in phases. There'll be several icy professional parts - a lawyer or a cop. And then there'll be the intelligent-but-wounded group and then the period things. It goes in sequence.

My experience is that's rare - that you have a script that is... what they call 'film-ready.'

My family is from the South, and I can remember all those ladies I grew up with, like my great-aunts, who had handkerchiefs. There's something sweet about them.

My parents were divorced and I would spend weekends with my father.

People can't really place me. They're not really sure who I am.

People's view of cancer will change when they have their own relationship with cancer, which everyone will, at some point.

Some people's personalities are so compelling that they command attention.

Tanning is tricky, because a lot of people just look orange.

The entertainment industry is terrified of silence.

The goal seems to me at times just to be business first.

The good thing is that I'm always honest.

The thing about death is that it's honest.

Traits like humility, courage, and empathy are easily overlooked - but it's immensely important to find them in your closest relationships.

What I find so interesting about people is the choices they make, and how that effects their behavior, their sense of self and their relationships.

What I hope in my ideal world is that with each project, I'll either get to work with a really great script that would force me to grow, or work with a really great actor who will make me better.

What I love about a play is that it's such an investment because only time can create a lot of what happens onstage.

What people can survive and what they don't survive is shocking to me. Someone can go to Iraq and be blown to bits and survive. Someone can trip and fall on the street and they die - that's that.

When your life is being threatened there's an instinctive urge to fight. You fight for the time you have, for your relationships.

Working with special needs children is hard.

You have to relish the challenge of television.

You know when someone's over-flattering you in a way. You smile but you can't believe it.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       

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