Mary Tyler Moore quotes:

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  • Take chances, make mistakes. That's how you grow. Pain nourishes your courage. You have to fail in order to practice being brave.

  • There are certain things about me that I will never tell to anyone because I am a very private person. But basically, what you see is who I am. I'm independent, I do like to be liked, I do look for the good side of life and people. I'm positive, I'm disciplined, I like my life in order, and I'm neat as a pin.

  • And then Dick called and said, I'm going to do a special called Dick Van Dyke and the other woman, that would be you, because every time I try to check into a hotel with my wife, they look at me as though I'm cheating on Laura.

  • There are two kinds of cloning right now. One is therapeutic cloning which is for coming up with cures for life threatening, really, really awful diseases. Then there is reproductive cloning, which is to make a human being out of your DNA and a donor egg.

  • Diabetes is an all-too-personal time bomb which can go off today, tomorrow, next year, or 10 years from now - a time bomb affecting millions like me and the children here today.

  • There are two kinds of cloning right now. One is therapeutic cloning which is for coming up with cures for life threatening, really, really awful diseases. Then there is reproductive cloning, which is to make a human being out of your DNA and a donor egg

  • But I'm very happy with my life the way it has been turning out. A little time in the country, a little time with the animals and working on behalf of them.

  • I just like the continue doing what I've been doing. A melange of funny, straight drama, television, movies, a little theater here and there wouldn't hurt. So if I can keep doing that, I'll be a very happy person.

  • Because of the enormous responsibility, diabetic kids tend to grow up to be the most mature, most realistic people who have a natural desire to reach outside of themselves.

  • Maybe mom is my alter ego and the woman I'm able to be when I'm working.

  • There's one beneficial effect of going to Moscow. You come home waving the American flag with all your might.

  • Sometimes you have to get to know someone really well to realize you're really strangers.

  • What happens is that the system builds many inferior blood vessels in the eye to take the place of the vessels that are dying. And those blood vessels are not up to the task. And they bleed. They hemorrhage and they cover the eye inside with blood.

  • You can't be brave if you've only had wonderful things happen to you.

  • A human being has been given an intellect to make choices, and we know there are other food sources that do not require the killing of a creature that would protest being killed.

  • And I came close to losing a part of my foot on two occasions. I hope I'm consistently lucky and that the next time I develop a blister or step on something sharp, that I don't go as far as I did on those two times.

  • Lou Grant was pretty much always Lou Grant

  • I live in a kind of controlled awareness. I wouldn't call it fear, but it's an awareness. I know I have a responsibility to behave in a certain way. I'm able to do that.

  • Well, there are certain foods that I prefer not to eat because they're just such a jolt to the system.

  • No candy bars unless I've had a low blood sugar where I'm shaky

  • When the doctor said I had diabetes, I conjured images of languishing on a chaise longue nibbling chocolates. I have no idea why I thought this.

  • I know the food groups that I like to have and are good for me and those that I have to stay away from. And so, I don't need to know exactly what I'm going to eat, but I take my insulin probably 20 minutes before I'm going to sit down.

  • I've had problems with my eyes, and my legs hurt if I walk a great deal. That's due to very bad circulation. It's called claudication, and it's painful. So I have to stop if I'm walking, and pretending I'm looking in the window, so that I can rest them a little bit and then start off again.

  • I live in New York simply because I don't know any better. I moved there when the show went off the air a couple of years after that.

  • Behind every beautiful fur, there is a story. It is a bloody, barbaric story.

  • No candy bars unless I've had a low blood sugar where I'm shaky.

  • My peripheral vision has been severely limited because of my diabetes, which means I can see just fine looking straight ahead. But if I am at a function with lots of people, I am constantly bumping into people - even kicking them!

  • I need insulin to stay alive. It's just therapy to keep going. What I can do is make sure that I keep my blood sugar down to a reasonable level. I can exercise, and I can eat properly. And insulin plays a very big part in that.

  • I loved working with Valerie. That was the most wonderful revelation to find that when we are on a set and we're playing our roles, we're like separated twins. We can almost finish each other's dialogue.

  • And that's what the audience was feeling too, as they watched the show and as they watch it now. And overriding all of that is the way it was written. It was written honestly. There was never any manufactured laugh. There was never compromising of character.

  • Interestingly that some of the characters did not turn out the way Jim and Allen had envisioned them.

  • The only leading man I ever had a crush on was James Garner.

  • The kinds of shows that seem to work now, the comedy shows, are those which require very little attention. They're superficial and I like articulate comedy.

  • I think I can take responsibility for that in that I was the audience. I was the voice of sanity around whom all these crazies did their dance. And I reacted in the same way that a member of the audience would have reacted.

  • Reruns are wonderful because it usually indicates that they had something going for them to begin with and that's why you're still looking at them. And in both my shows, The Dick Van Dyke Show and the last one, they were so well written and so good they hold up.

  • Well, Rhoda was, I think, the last actress that we saw. There had been so many wonderful actresses who were close, really close. But there was no magical epiphany.

  • I do watch a lot of Fox News. I like Charles Krauthammer and Bill O'Reilly.

  • Diets are for those who are thick and tired of it.

  • A friend will give you immediate feedback and that will be that friend's opinion. An analyst often remains quiet and you hear what you've said and you gain your own insight.

  • Adolescence has such a negative connotation and it shouldn't. It's experimentation, it's being unsure, no preconceived notions.

  • And the sculptor woman was so clever in the way she did it. She had the beret just about to leave my hand. So it's attached to this finger and that's what will keep it there. And I'm looking up at it, so there's no question but that that beret is going to fly.

  • Both children and adults like me who live with type 1 diabetes need to be mathematicians, physicians, personal trainers, and dietitians all rolled into one,

  • Chronic disease like a troublesome relative is something you can learn to manage but never quite escape.

  • Eating sundaes is something you can't do every night.

  • Fans want you to be something super-human, something that's impossible for any human being to be.

  • Having a dream is what keeps you alive. Overcoming the challenges makes life worth living.

  • I can't imagine a pain more all-encompassing than losing a child.

  • I do watch a lot of Fox News. I like Charles Krauthammer and Bill OReilly.

  • I don't know how to do the other, so I won't even consider television until the audience's taste changes.

  • I don't think there's anything quite as dashing as a cop on horseback. To me it's wonderful.

  • I don't think you should ever expect forever in anything, in either platonic friendships or sexual friendships.

  • I don't want anyone to tell me something.

  • I go to an analyst not because I need to but because I choose to and maybe that's the difference. I don't think I have any huge neurosis, but I have questions for which I seek if not answers at least a guidance toward the answers.

  • I have always been a combination of both security and insecurity.

  • I have no problem walking in New York because I have a very brisk pace: By the time anyone recognizes me, it's too late, I'm four blocks away from them.

  • I really consider myself a Californian, but I have those great comedic roots in Brooklyn.

  • I still feel as if I weren't a good enough mother. I didn't break any rules.

  • I think marriage, in its loosest sense, is people committing to each other saying I love you and I like being with you and that is wonderful. I don't see the need to formalize it unless you plan to have children and you want the fair distribution of assets.

  • I wish that I could write. I think that's a wonderful outlet for an artist. You are ultimately in control. Your fate is not determined by outside influences. You can write wherever you are. I don't think I have the talent.

  • I would surround myself with people who know what they're doing.

  • I wouldn't want to enter into a relationship in which there was this inhibiting factor that said it can never be forever.

  • I'm an experienced woman; I've been around. ... Well, all right, I might not've been around, but I've been ... nearby.

  • I'm not an actress who can create a character. I play me.

  • I'm sort of doing a lot of the things now that I never thought I would and that I wished I had done a year or so ago.

  • I've always had courage. But I didn't always own my diabetes.

  • I've had the fame and the joy of getting laughter - those are gifts.

  • Maybe in adopting an adolescent attitude you then take on the look of a young person.

  • My weakness is pizza, any form of carbohydrate. I like junk carbohydrates, I like cheap greasy cheeseburgers, quality french fries.

  • Take chances, make mistakes. That's how you grow.

  • The kinds of shows that seem to work now, the comedy shows, are those which require very little attention. They're superficial and I like articulate comedy. I don't know how to do the other, so I won't consider television until the audience's taste changes.

  • The thing is I never want to be an observer, it's only in retrospect that I wish I had observed.

  • There is a dark side. I tend not to be as optimistic as Mary Richards. I have an anger in me that I carry from my childhood experiences - I expect a lot of myself and I'm not too kind to myself.

  • This has been a wonderful life, absolutely terrific. There are very few things that I would go back and do differently, if I had that control.

  • Three things have helped me successfully go through the ordeals of life -- an understanding husband, a good analyst and millions of dollars.

  • We have 11 horses up at our country home, six of which are rescue animals ... Two of them are 'cop horses' from the mounted police, ages 4 and 5, who turned out to have physical problems that weren't suitable for the kind of work they have to do. Now, with us, they are just out to pasture and have nothing but a good time, eating their heads off, romping and frolicking, and just doing all good horsey things.

  • What's nice about the rain is you don't feel you have to live up to anything. Everything around you is so grey and wet and damp and dreary that you don't feel you have to smile and percolate as you do on a sunny spring day.

  • When you're doing a television series, unless you really pay attention to your life, it doesn't leave very much time for anything else.

  • Worrying is a necessary part of life.

  • Well, there are certain foods that I prefer not to eat because they're just such a jolt to the system

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