Top 88 Plimpton Quotes

#1. I'm hoping maybe people like working with me because I like what I do for a living and I want to have a good time.

Martha Plimpton

#2. My mother had been an actress and we came from that world in New York, the theater world and the downtown sort of theater scene, and so I guess we didn't really have what you'd call like a Hollywood kind of life at all.

Martha Plimpton

#3. It's important to me if I'm having a good time than I feel like the work is better. The quality of it is better and my level of interest is higher.

Martha Plimpton

#4. I'm so sick of hearing how there's no strong roles for women. I don't care about strong roles. I just want to see women who are characters! A nun, a serial killer, a housewife, as long as there's some depth there.

Martha Plimpton

#5. At this point, I don't get hired a lot because people don't think I could finance a movie.

Martha Plimpton

#6. I remember being awed by it - the uniqueness and nicety of style - and I suspect I was a bit jealous because we were more or less of the same generation.

George Plimpton

#7. I watch things that are fun, or funny, or interesting.

Martha Plimpton

#8. He still has the same way of calling to me, as if I'm still new to him, as if he has yet to get over me.

George Plimpton

#9. A lot of people in this country right now are living with multiple generations under one roof, struggling to make ends meet.

Martha Plimpton

#10. I wouldn't say Malkovich is totally insane, but he's not living in the real world. He's living in his world, which is a fine world to live in apparently.

Martha Plimpton

#11. I almost never have a plan for myself ... I'm not ambitious in that way.

Martha Plimpton

#12. Things come to you in life when you're prepared for them, when you're ready for them.

Martha Plimpton

#13. I live like a crazy old pack rat.

Martha Plimpton

#14. Cigarettes are an instant signifier in culture. It punctuates a joke, or puts that extra zing on a punch line. I like them as a prop. I think it can be really useful for character and texture and contrast and all of that.

Martha Plimpton

#15. It's not common for a woman on television, especially if she's the mom of the family, to be funny. She's usually a straight man or foil.

Martha Plimpton

#16. I am a fierce patriot, and I try to be outspoken about my beliefs.

Martha Plimpton

#17. It's an unusual situation for me to be working and making a living.

Martha Plimpton

#18. You'll notice my eyes have sort of glazed over.

Martha Plimpton

#19. I've had cats all my life and obviously loved them, but the litter box, and the having to always get a house sitter, they're just too - they're too rigid. Cats are too needy somehow.

Martha Plimpton

#20. There are an infinite number of ways to be moved in the theater.

Martha Plimpton

#21. I don't pay attention to the ratings.

Martha Plimpton

#22. Party of the Century by Deborah Davis, about Truman Capote's famous Black and White Ball. Capote by Gerald Clarke. Truman Capote by George Plimpton. Fifth Avenue, 5 A.M. by Sam Wasson. Slim, the memoir of Slim Keith. And The Sisters by David Grafton, about Babe Paley and her sisters.

Melanie Benjamin

#23. Things tend to come when they are meant to come. I know that sounds kind of like spiritual and cheesy, but I think things come when they're meant to come.

Martha Plimpton

#24. You do not cut a check in the state of Kansas to John Doe, executioner. The executioner is paid in cash so there's no trail to him

George Plimpton

#25. Give me good books, good conversations, and my Trek Y-Foil, and I shall want for nothing else.

George Plimpton

#26. Who owns your body? You or the state?

Martha Plimpton

#27. The word 'equality' shows up too much in our founding documents for anyone to pretend it's not the American way.

Martha Plimpton

#28. I've been doing old-people things since I was a child.

Martha Plimpton

#29. There are so many brilliant women on television right now.

Martha Plimpton

#30. When you're working with good people it brings good things out in you.

Martha Plimpton

#31. In the theater, as an actor, you're welcoming people into your house.

Martha Plimpton

#32. The New York Times published the guest list on the front page. The masks were a brilliant concept.

George Plimpton

#33. I'd just like to see a role for women where someone who isn't traditionally attractive is not portraying the best friend. You know, the character that only speaks in questions. 'Gee, are you gonna go out with him? Do you think I look fat?'

Martha Plimpton

#34. I am a United States citizen and I vote.

Martha Plimpton

#35. It's a very long and difficult schedule on a single-camera show.

Martha Plimpton

#36. I have never been convinced there's anything inherently wrong in having fun.

George Plimpton

#37. We don't want to come off as pro-smoking. Even though we didn't smoke real cigarettes at all, you want to be careful of people's sensitivities.

Martha Plimpton

#38. I never understood people who don't have bookshelves.

George Plimpton

#39. If I'm enjoying myself, I find my opportunities for more fun become greater.

Martha Plimpton

#40. I don't like to get bored and don't like to repeat myself.

Martha Plimpton

#41. 'Community' is a great show. I love 'Raising Hope' with Martha Plimpton. And I love 'The Middle' - another Chicagoan in there is Neil Flynn, who used to play the janitor in 'Scrubs.'

Jim O'Heir

#42. I just want to be clear, I am a very dark and bitter person, but I think on some level, everything really does come when it's meant to come.

Martha Plimpton

#43. The '80s to me, more than anything else, represents a time of real criminal activity in the office of the president: an incredibly disparate economy in terms of the class distinctions and whatnot, and a tremendous shallowness - a lot of sort of bank robbery by executives.

Martha Plimpton

#44. It's long past time we started focusing on the solutions that actually keep women healthy, instead of using basic aspects of women's health as a tool of cultural, moral, and political control.

Martha Plimpton

#45. I am not bored at all. I am not bored in the least.

Martha Plimpton

#46. My mom just didn't put a very high premium on me being like really famous or really wealthy or anything.

Martha Plimpton

#47. I like things that are civilized.

Martha Plimpton

#48. As an actress for most of my life, I am profoundly familiar with poverty.

Martha Plimpton

#49. It is also one of the pleasures of oral biography, in that the reader, rather than editor, is jury.

George Plimpton

#50. I hate those people who say 'I don't own a television' - I own one and I watch it whenever I can.

Martha Plimpton

#51. At the base of it was the urge, if you wanted to play football, to knock someone down, that was what the sport was all about, the will to win closely linked with contact.

George Plimpton

#52. During my teen years, for Halloween, I went as a registered voter.

Martha Plimpton

#53. It's long been accepted as fact that the availability of family planning services saves lives. Where women have access to these services, children and families are healthier, and society at large benefits.

Martha Plimpton

#54. I love dogs because they're so adaptable.

Martha Plimpton

#55. I am not a morning person. I like to sleep in.

Martha Plimpton

#56. 'The Paris Review' was always the pinnacle: it was the place to be published. You were thrilled if you were published in 'The Paris Review,' and George Plimpton himself was practically mythical. He was a legendary figure.

James Salter

#57. It's like people always say, Well, does sport teach you anything in life? It teaches you certain things, but it doesn't teach you other things. It doesn't teach, as I say, very much about marriage, very much about how to make a living, any of those things.

George Plimpton

#58. I prefer to think of the audience as a single living organism with which I am sharing a singular, never-to-be-repeated experience.

Martha Plimpton

#59. Rick Bass is one of the best writers of his generation.

George Plimpton

#60. The smaller the ball used in the sport, the better the book.

George Plimpton

#61. ...and so it was that my wealth came to be measured in books

Colleen Plimpton

#62. My mom and I used to listen to records, read, and take train rides across the country in the summer. It was a very chill life. She didn't expose me to anything that was ahead of my development, but she expected me to adjust to her world - she did not expect to adjust to mine.

Martha Plimpton

#63. Sigmund Freud was a novelist with a scientific background. He just didn't know he was a novelist. All those damn psychiatrists after him, they didn't know he was a novelist either.
(Interview in Writers at Work: The Paris Review Interviews, Eighth Series, ed. George Plimpton, 1988)

John Irving

#64. Very often a job will come along that speaks to the place you're in as a person at that very moment. And usually once I've done it I feel like that part is over.

Martha Plimpton

#65. It's easier to lecture women on sexual morality than it is to explain why all Americans shouldn't have comprehensive, fair, and equal health care coverage.

Martha Plimpton

#66. He was interviewed in the early '60s by a young novelist, Pati Hill.

George Plimpton

#67. I've often said in the past that I thought MTV was sort of evil incarnate and signified the beginning of the end. And I don't know if I'm entirely wrong about that, but they did sign my paychecks a year ago, so I guess I'm part of the problem.

Martha Plimpton

#68. Women have always been at the forefront of progressive movements. Women can be depended on when you need bodies in the streets for women's rights and human rights.

Martha Plimpton

#69. See, I don't watch reality television anymore. I watched a little bit of it for awhile, but I found it turned my soul into a black sludge, and I just did not find it healthy or good for me at all, because I would watch it and be disgusted, disgusted.

Martha Plimpton

#70. My favorite monologue in the book is Kate Harrington's story of her relationship with Truman.

George Plimpton

#71. That's the thing about interviews, at some point you're going to change your mind. But it's there forever and you can't escape it.

Martha Plimpton

#72. People seem to think that you should be willing to speak to them whether they're jerks or not.

Martha Plimpton

#73. Well, I have to write. A lot of people forget that. They think I'm sort of crazy baffoon who can't make up his mind what to do in life

George Plimpton

#74. I don't know if I've learned anything about people, but I've learned about Twitter.

Martha Plimpton

#75. It's not so weird that four generations are living together under the same roof and trying to make it work. It's how a lot of people in this country are living right now.

Martha Plimpton

#76. As happens with people who love a thing too much, it destroys them.
Oscar Wilde said, 'You destroy the thing that you love.' It's the other way around. What you love destroys you.

George Plimpton

#77. Independent film is not only an oxymoron; it doesn't exist anymore.

Martha Plimpton

#78. I wasn't paraded around for sale at all. My mother wasn't into that.

Martha Plimpton

#79. Women know the financial, social and physical costs of not having access to basic health care.

Martha Plimpton

#80. Being nominated is the win. For me, being nominated is winning. It's just unbelievable.

Martha Plimpton

#81. I would almost rather be in debt constantly than work with horrible people that I hate.

Martha Plimpton

#82. Actors, they come and go, you know.

Martha Plimpton

#83. I'm a personality - like a George Plimpton who effectively plays himself in a bunch of different roles, or a Paul Lynde-type character.

John Hodgman

#84. I like cluttered, old, dark-wood antiques. I like character.

Martha Plimpton

#85. Plimpton was a presence. He looked for ways in which he could make himself ridiculous. That made him a great storyteller.

Stefan Fatsis

#86. One comes to a decision based on what one wants, not based on what one doesn't want. Got it?

Martha Plimpton

#87. I want to be true to the character and maintain some consistency and give the audience what they love while at the same time keeping things fresh and grow the character.

Martha Plimpton

#88. I feel comfortable in the presence of oddity. Probably because I'm a little bit odd.

Martha Plimpton

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