Top 12 Quotes & Sayings by Irving Thalberg

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American producer Irving Thalberg.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
Irving Thalberg

Irving Grant Thalberg was an American film producer during the early years of motion pictures. He was called "The Boy Wonder" for his youth and ability to select scripts, choose actors, gather production staff, and make profitable films, including Grand Hotel, China Seas, A Night at the Opera, Mutiny on the Bounty, Camille and The Good Earth. His films carved out an international market, "projecting a seductive image of American life brimming with vitality and rooted in democracy and personal freedom", states biographer Roland Flamini.

The movie medium will eventually take its place as art because there is no other medium of interest to so many people.
Novelty is always welcome but talking pictures are just a fad.
A story never looks as good as when the other fellow buys it. — © Irving Thalberg
A story never looks as good as when the other fellow buys it.
Credit you give yourself is not worth having.
Forget it, Louis, no Civil War picture ever made a nickel.
No story ever looks as bad as the story you've just bought; no story ever looks as good as the story the other fellow just bought.
If it isn’t for the writing, we’ve got nothing. Writers are the most important people in Hollywood. And we must never let them know it.
The most important person in the motion picture process is the writer... and we must do everything in our power to prevent them from ever realizing it.
Screen credit is valuable only when it's given you. If you're in a position to give yourself credit, you don't need it.
The producer beating a new path for himself through the wilderness is going to do the thing 'differently,' of course. But after a while, he looks about him. The territory is unfamiliar, the forest ahead forbidding. Just how 'different' dare he be? He looks at his resources, and then at the established successes of the past. He suddenly realizes he must play safe, be sure. The unknown is a gamble; the known isn't-at least comparatively. The safest plan, obviously, is to follow the trailblazers. So he produces an imitation of one of the current successes. Usually it is a mediocre imitation.
What's this business of being a writer. It's just putting one word after another.
Compliments you pay to yourself aren't worth having.
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