💬 SenQuotes.com
 Quotes

Elaine Dundy Quotes

Elaine Dundy Quotes
1.
I find I always have to write something on a steamed mirror.
Elaine Dundy

2.
A rowdy bunch on the whole, they were most of them so violently individualistic as to be practically interchangeable.
Elaine Dundy

3.
Acting doesn't bring anything to a text. On the contrary, it detracts from it.
Elaine Dundy

4.
I mean, the question actors most often get asked is how they can bear saying the same things over and over again, night after night, but God knows the answer to that is, don't we all anyway; might as well get paid for it.
Elaine Dundy

5.
I hate champagne more than anything in the world next to Seven-Up.
Elaine Dundy

Similar Authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson William Shakespeare Donald Trump Mahatma Gandhi Barack Obama Rush Limbaugh Henry David Thoreau Friedrich Nietzsche Mark Twain Rajneesh Cassandra Clare C. S. Lewis Albert Einstein Oscar Wilde Thomas Jefferson
6.
It's difficult to explain, but I just somehow feel that I never really *have* lived; that I never really will live--exist or whatever--in the sense that other people do. It drives me crazy. I was terribly aware of it all those nights waiting for you in the Ritz bar looking around at what seemed to be real grown-up lives. I just find everybody else's life surrounded by plate glass. I mean I'd like to break through it just once and actually touch one.
Elaine Dundy

7.
It's amazing how right you can be about a person you don't know; it's only the people you do know who confuse you.
Elaine Dundy

8.
I always expect people to behave much better than I do. When they actually behave worse, I am frankly incredulous.
Elaine Dundy

Quote Topics by Elaine Dundy: People Young Want World Mean Real Mirrors Acting From Actors Humorous Complaining Acting Funny Doe Principles Stories Mind Disinterested Fate Bunch Spectators Thinking Next Pleasant Knows Darling Remember Forever Answers Writing Crazy
9.
At some point in my life I realized I knew only celebrities, I didn't know any real people. I think it was a master stroke of Fate that in researching the greatest celebrity of them all, I would at last be meeting real people, finding them more extraordinary than celebrities; fascinated by them all and enjoying enduring friendships with some.
Elaine Dundy

10.
To me Vivien Leigh was a tragic heroine of classic proportions: chosen, blessed and abandoned by the gods. Obstinately she tried to control and defy her destiny and to know her story is to be inspired by pity and terror.
Elaine Dundy

11.
That's my answer to the question what is your strongest emotion, if you ever want to ask me: Curiosity, old bean. Curiosity every time.
Elaine Dundy

12.
What’s the use of remembering anything? If it was unpleasant it was unpleasant and if it was pleasant it’s over.
Elaine Dundy

13.
I’ve never wanted to meet anyone I’ve been introduced to. I want to meet all the other people.
Elaine Dundy

14.
... I was merely a disinterested spectator at the Banquet of Life.
Elaine Dundy

15.
The vehemence of my moral indignation surprised me. Was I beginning to have standards and principles, and, oh dear, scruples? What were they, and what would I do with them, and how much were they going to get in my way?
Elaine Dundy

16.
The world is wide, wide, wide, and I am young, young, young, and we’re all going to live forever!
Elaine Dundy

17.
Oh, Teddy, darling, thank you, thank you, for restoring my cynicism. I was too young to lose it.
Elaine Dundy

18.
I don't always understand other people's motives. I will repeat that for my own benefit, if you don't mind. I don't always understand other people's motives.
Elaine Dundy

19.
What is always overlooked is that although the poor want to be rich, it does not follow that they either like the rich or that they in any way want to emulate their characters which, in fact, they despise. Both the poor and the rich have always found precisely the same grounds on which to complain about each other. Each feels the other has no manners, is disloyal, corrupt, insensitive - and has never put in an honest day's work in its life.
Elaine Dundy