Uta Hagen quotes:

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  • We must overcome the notion that we must be regular... it robs you of the chance to be extraordinary and leads you to the mediocre.

  • We were not allowed to say, Screw, but we could say, Hump the hostess, because hump is in Shakespeare.

  • We had a relationship that lasted 44 years. Herbert and I lived together 10 years before we were married. He always gave me a little heart for whatever anniversary.

  • Marlon was so sensitive, you thought the poor guy just had a bad education.

  • Talent is an amalgam of high sensitivity; easy vulnerability; high sensory equipment (seeing, hearing, touching, smelling, tasting intensely); a vivid imagination as well as a grip on reality; the desire to communicate one's own experience and sensations, to make one's self heard and seen.

  • I'm a bad liar; I don't know what to say backstage.

  • Working with Brando was fun. It was like a tennis match. We played unbelievably well together.

  • They still had the Lord Chamberlain, so we had this idiotic censorship. We were allowed three Jesus Christs instead of 10. Why three were OK, I don't know.

  • They still had the Lord Chamberlain, so we had this idiotic censorship. We were allowed three Jesus Christs instead of 10. Why three were OK, I don't know."

  • I love playing Chekhov. That's the hardest; that's why I love it most.

  • I love going to the movies; I love watching good movie actors. They must know something I don't.

  • no work of art is ever finished, nothing is ever static, no performance is for keeps.

  • Usually, someone who's in a show gets me a ticket. I feel cornered. I can't walk out if I don't like it.

  • The actor must know that since he, himself, is the instrument, he must play on it to serve the character with the same effortless dexterity with which the violinist makes music on his. Just because he doesn't look like a violin is no reason to assume his techniques should be thought of as less difficult.

  • If you want a bourgeois existence, you shouldn't be an actor. You're in the wrong profession.

  • Awards don't really mean much.

  • I won't go to England because they won't let my dog in.

  • Maybe the one I enjoyed playing most was A Month in the Country.

  • Theoretically, the actor ought to be more sound in mind and body than other people, since he learns to understand the psychological problems of human beings when putting his own passions, his loves, fears, and rages to work in the service of the characters he plays. He will learn to face himself, to hide nothing from himself- and to do so takes AN INSATIABLE CURIOSITY ABOUT THE HUMAN CONDITION

  • Once in awhile, there's stuff that makes me say, That's what theatre's about. It has to be a human event on the stage, and that doesn't happen very often.

  • All tedious research is worth one inspired moment.

  • For some strange reason, we believe that anyone who lived before we were born was in some peculiar way a different kind of human being from any we have come in contact with in our own lifetime. This concept must be changed; we must realize in our bones that almost everything in time and history has changed except the human being.

  • I have disassociated myself from that book.

  • I think, by and large, the level of acting is mediocre. When I go to the theatre, I get so angry. I don't go.

  • It must be noted that it is often the colleague or direct disciple of a new thinker who gets stuck in literal interpretations of the work, tending to freeze the new ideas and language into an inflexible, static condition.

  • Keep pace with the present. Take a trip to the moon. envision the future.

  • One cannot demand of art that it pay you in any other way than in the satisfaction of the work itself.

  • Since the time of the ancient Greeks a democracy has depended on its philosophers and creative artists. It can only flourish by continuous probing, prodding, and questioning of the social conditions under which man exists and tries to better himself. One of the first moves of a dictatorship is to stifle the artists and thinkers who have the ability to stir up dissent from any prescribed dogma which might enslave them. Because the artist can arouse the curiosity and conscience of his community, he becomes a threat to those who have taken power.

  • The knowledge that every day there is something more to learn, something higher to reach for, something new to make for others, makes each day infinitely precious

  • The need to be loved and protected is at a peak when we feel abandoned and are particularly vulnerable to difficult circumstances.

  • Thoughts and feelings are suspended in a vacuum unless they instigate and feed the selected actions, and it is the characters actions which reveal the character in the play.

  • To rebel or revolt against the status quo is in the very nature of an artist.

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