Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician Ethel Waters.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
Ethel Waters was an American singer and actress. Waters frequently performed jazz, swing, and pop music on the Broadway stage and in concerts. She began her career in the 1920s singing blues. Waters notable recordings include "Dinah", "Stormy Weather", "Taking a Chance on Love", "Heat Wave", "Supper Time", "Am I Blue?", "Cabin in the Sky", "I'm Coming Virginia", and her version of "His Eye Is on the Sparrow". Waters was the second African American to be nominated for an Academy Award. She was the first African American to star on her own television show and the first African-American woman to be nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award.
Negroes are human beings with exactly the same faults and virtues as members of the other races.
I wanted to be with the kind of people I'd grown up with, but you can't go back to them and be one of them again, no matter how hard you try.
Elia Kazan understood my problems. He was able to bring out the very best in me. He gave me credit for my intelligence.
You are a person of the greatest importance when you are a mother of a family. Just do your job right and your kids will love you.
There was one emotional outlet my people always had when they had the blues. That was singing.
All my life I've been prejudiced against wealthy people.
I have no acting technique I act instinctively. That's why I can't play any role that isn't based on something in my life.
There's no hypocrisy in Hell's Kitchen.
It has been an ache and a joy both to look over this big shoulder of mine at all my yesterdays.
Mom never quit on me. My only regret is that she didn't live long enough to share some of the money and comforts my work in show business has brought me.
Today or any day that phone may ring and bring good news.
I have reason to be shy. I've been hurt plenty.
We are all gifted. That is our inheritance.
I never felt I belonged. I was always an outsider.
I never was a child.
The white audiences thought I was white, my features being what they are, and at every performance I'd have to take off my gloves to prove I was a spade.
I cannot help feeling I would have been happier with a husband and chidren of my own.
My whole family could sing. My family harmonized without any instruments to accompany them.
When you dominate other people's emotions, the time has to come when you will have to pay, and heavily, for that privilege.
Asking what I considered an impossible salary when I didn't want to work for someone has boosted my pay again and again.
In her whole life Mom never earned more than five or six dollars a week. Being without a husband, it was hard for her to find any place at all for us to live.
Nothing can beat the smell of dew and flowers and the odor that comes out of the earth when the sun goes down.
Somehow, the things my mother wanted to do, the release in evangelism she sought with such frenzy, were transferred to me.
I never was coddled, or liked, or understood by my family.
I never accepted the idea that I was all through. I guess no person who has once been a star can do that, ever.
No one in the world can beat Ella Fitzgerald as a riff singer.
New York is only 97 miles from Philadelphia but was the Big Time as no other American city has ever been.
I've never been able to feel that there is anything undignified about making your living by the sweat of your brow.
Though I was excited about the Sojourner Truth play, it was not reassuring to think that my entire future might depend on the success of that one show.
The big compliment came from the beer drinkers who didn't know me. They wouldn't drink or move when I sang. If they had their glasses in mid-air, the glasses wouldn't come down.
Basically there is no difference between whites and blacks, browns and yellows. I decided to think no more of people as Northerners and Southerners.
We never had a bathtub. Mom would bathe me in the wooden or tin washtub in the kitchen, or in a big lard can.
I am an isolationist.
I want affection and tenderness desperately, but there's something in me that prevents me from handing it out.
After years in white theaters I dreaded working in colored houses. The noise, the stomping, whistling, and cheering that hadn't annoyed me when I was young was now something I dreaded.
Whenever I played Columbus, Ohio, I dropped in to see my close friend, a medium who had mysterious powers. Her Indian guide was Mohawk.
I had always loved John Ford's pictures. And I came to love him, too, but I was frightened to death working for him. He used the shock treatment while directing me.
Mom was the greatest influence of my childhood. She wanted to save me from the vice, lust, and drinking that was all about me.
There is a great supply of amateur undertakers in show business.
All the men in my life have been two things: an epic and an epidemic.
Twenty-five years is a long time for a girl to live out of a trunk, and after looking over a few houses, I fell in love with one in Southwest Los Angeles.
Many people know how to criticize, but few know how to praise.
The greatest acts in colored show business had long made Harlem their home and favorite stamping ground.
Only those who are being burned know what fire is like.
You are a person of the greatest importance when you are a mother of the family.
Whenever I write for hotel reservations, I always enclose a set of rules I have made for the hotels.
My aunts lived on liquor and seldom felt like eating much. I don't know what's wrong about a kid stealing when he's hungry.
There had been lots of crises in my life. And there was plenty of spunk and battle cry still left in me.
I have always been psychic. The walls of any room I walk into talk to me.
I could always open shows, perform through the middle, and close shows.
We show girls were forced to live in whorehouses in each town, no other accommodations being available.
I learned early in life not to judge others. We outcasts are very happy and content to leave that job to our social superiors.
I know the most terrible thing that can happen to a woman. That is the gang-up. Men put you to sleep with their drops and one man after another goes in and takes you.
I don't care to dress up except when it is necessary or good for my business.
My father came back one day and forced my mother to submit to him. He raped her, holding a knife.
I am somebody cause God don't make no junk
We miss a lot in life because we don't know when to quit, what to leave out.
I wondered what I would do if I didn't have my God to turn to and be able to read the Book He had divinely inspired.
I'm not afraid to die. I'm looking forward to it. I know the Lord has His arms wrapped around this big sparrow.
If whites bored me, it was because they bored themselves. They seemed to get little fun out of life and were desperately lonely.