Top 34 Quotes & Sayings by Finty Williams

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English actress Finty Williams.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Finty Williams

Tara Cressida Frances "Finty" Williams is an English actress.

My mother very bravely put me into rehab two weeks after my father died.
I happen to think Ruth Wilson is jaw-droppingly brilliant.
My mother would strike me off if I didn't say theatre was incredibly important, and when you see something like 'Network' at the National Theatre, my god it's important. You feel like you can't breathe.
I don't spend as much time with my mother as I would love to because she is always working. — © Finty Williams
I don't spend as much time with my mother as I would love to because she is always working.
It's an amazingly daunting prospect to play any part you've seen someone else play brilliantly.
There are a lot of people who are very willing to put my mother on a pedestal, which is a lonely existence. She wants to dispute that so much that she will literally do anything for anybody.
If she wasn't my mother, I'd want her to be my best friend.
The way I got through thinking that I was very boring and very unsparkly was by being the first person in the bar and being the person that bought the drinks for everyone.
Saturday afternoon I'll go shopping. Always. I can find things to buy wherever I am.
I think Ma is more honest than I am sometimes.
I've got a terrible crush on someone and last week mum was coaching me - it was a real masterclass - on how to very casually say hello to him. I had to talk to her hand. Tears were pouring down our faces.
I can't think of many places I'd rather spend Saturday afternoon than in a tattoo parlor.
I actually wanted to be a dancer, though I doubt anyone now would pay to see me in a leotard!
My father was my mother's greatest flag waver.
Who wouldn't want to work with someone you so utterly respect and you're such good friends with?
I'd love to do a play with Ma but I don't know whether that's like literally filling in your own grave and putting the gravestone on top.
It's a knack that my mother doesn't have. The only audiobook she ever did she had to leave after the first day, because she couldn't string two sentences together. It's about the only thing she can't do.
I want to play Miss Adelaide in 'Guys and Dolls.' Really badly.
Ma did a play called 'Entertaining Strangers' when I was about 14, which totally changed my life, I loved it so much.
I've worked with a couple of people in my career that have stopped me dead in my tracks because they make it look so effortless and so extraordinary. One of them is Ben Daniels and the other is Chris Larkin.
I was 18 and had an inverted light bulb moment where I thought that nothing I could do or say or how I looked was ever going to be good enough.
I adore tattoos. They're not painful; you just get an urge to swear a lot.
I don't know under what lighting I can play Juliet. Maybe with a small night light illuminating the stage.
I don't know whether, if your father is a brain surgeon, people go, 'He's not as good a brain surgeon as his father.' I don't know whether that happens, but because of who Ma is, a lot of people have an opinion, which they form before they get to know me or before they see what I can do.
I'm me, and I've got the cards that I've been dealt.
I had one critic who wrote: 'Finty Williams is like her mother in looks if not in talent.' It'll be on my gravestone. — © Finty Williams
I had one critic who wrote: 'Finty Williams is like her mother in looks if not in talent.' It'll be on my gravestone.
Some jobs you take because they are good for the heart.
I don't aspire to have her career, or to be as talented as her, because I'd feel like I was shooting myself down in flames. If you have a parent who is that successful and set them as a benchmark, then everything is going to be disappointing.
I spent most of my teenage years in the National Theatre.
I don't drink any more so I switched my obsession to musicals.
Ironically at drama school I was told I didn't have a voice conducive for radio.
Dad was much more critical. I did a comedy in Windsor and he came round afterwards with a load of paperwork and said nothing about my performance - just: 'I've got some forms for you to sign.'
I just take work a day at a time and hope that people believe in you and your ability, even if you don't quite believe in it yourself.
I love being surrounded by my family at weekends.
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