Top 43 Quotes & Sayings by James Gandolfini

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American actor James Gandolfini.
Last updated on September 17, 2024.
James Gandolfini

James Joseph Gandolfini Jr. was an American actor. He was best known for his role as Tony Soprano, the Italian-American Mafia crime boss in HBO's television series The Sopranos, for which he won three Emmy Awards, five Screen Actors Guild Awards, and one Golden Globe Award. Gandolfini's portrayal of Tony Soprano has been described as one of the greatest performances in television history.

Good writing will bring you to places you don't even expect sometimes.
I'm an actor... I do a job and I go home. Why are you interested in me? You don't ask a truck driver about his job.
All writers are vampires. — © James Gandolfini
All writers are vampires.
'The Sopranos' all came down to the writing. I wouldn't have been on for as long as I was if the writing weren't so good.
Actors will say, 'My character wouldn't say that.' Who said it was your character?
You know, all writers are vampires and they'll look around and they watch you when you're not even thinking they're watching you and they'll slip stuff in.
I love hearing people laugh.
I have nothing but respect for HBO.
What they say about TV shows is true. You're really a family. You laugh, you fight, you get close, you know? Movies are shorter. They're over quicker. You don't form the same bonds.
I love doing theaters, cracking people up, hearing them physically roll in the aisles. But we need to get serious. These are serious times. No joke. No joke.
I just don't think I'm that interesting. I don't think what I have to say is that interesting. To hear me go blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. I mean, who... cares?
I was voted best-looking kid in high school but, as you can see, things changed. I used to say I was a 260 pound Woody Allen. You can make that 295 pound now.
I want nothing to do with privilege. — © James Gandolfini
I want nothing to do with privilege.
I'd love to live in New Orleans. I love the freedom of it - for good and for bad.
I've been very lucky, considering what I look like and what I do.
I'm not a big, three-hour-play, Ibsen-revival kind of man.
I lost 30 pounds to play my character in 'The Mexican', but people don't take to skinny mafia men, and I don't feel right when I'm thin.
Standing in public in other people's clothes, pretending to be someone else. It's a strange way for a grown man to make a living.
I like dark places.
I find it hard to relax. I live in New York.
Part of the fun of acting is the research, finding out about other people.
People don't know and they shouldn't know that you work incredibly hard as an actor.
It is a dark, dark world. If you're going to be in a dark world, I can't think of any better one to be in. I still think I'm very lucky to be in it.
Both my mother and father were very supportive of any career move any of us wanted to make.
Putting somebody else's pants on and pretending to be somebody else is occasionally, as you grow older, horrifying.
I'm an angry guy.
I don't think I will do a Mafia character again. I want to get away from the violence a little bit, because it is starting to bother me personally.
I dabbled a little bit in acting in high school, and then I forgot about it completely. And then at about 25 I went to a class. I don't think anybody in my family thought it was an intelligent choice. I don't think anybody thought I'd succeed, which is understandable. I think they were just happy that I was doing something.
I like idiotic comedies.
I've never worked with an actor that I did not like. — © James Gandolfini
I've never worked with an actor that I did not like.
The Sopranos all came down to the writing. I wouldn't have been on for as long as I was if the writing weren't so good.
I just think its the changes that age brings. You slow down a little bit ... the writers are smart enough to write all those changes that life gives you.
I find I have to be the sad clown: laughing on the outside, crying on the inside.
I was voted best-looking kid in high school but, as you can see, things changed. I used to say I was a 260-pound Woody Allen. You can make that 295-pound now.
I lost 30 pounds to play my character in 'The Mexican,' but people don't take to skinny mafia men, and I don't feel right when I'm thin.
For once I'm not the guy losing my temper all the time.
This is gonna sound stupid, but I saw at one point that our mothers are ... bus drivers. No, they are the bus. See, they're the vehicle that gets us here. They drop us off and go on their way. They continue on their journey. And the problem is that we keep tryin' to get back on the bus, instead of just lettin' it go.
I have a little bit of a temper, but it's ... a useless temper, ... It doesn't accomplish anything, generally. It's just a lot of ranting and raving and nothing, so David (Chase) probably saw that and put it into the character.
Those who want respect, give respect.
Work-do plays, learn your craft, and go to school. Keep working. Nobody is going to give you jobs for going to parties or any of that nonsense. Go out, look around, do things.
You know my feelings: every day is a gift. It's just, does it have to be socks? — © James Gandolfini
You know my feelings: every day is a gift. It's just, does it have to be socks?
I dabbled a little bit in acting in high school and then I forgot about it completely. And then at about twenty-five I went to a class. I don't think anybody in my family thought it was an intelligent choice. I don't think anybody thought I'd succeed, which is understandable. I think they were just happy that I was doing something.
I like the prop food so much that I eat it between takes as well as on camera.
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