Explore popular quotes and sayings by a British actress Julie Christie.
Last updated on December 18, 2024.
Julie Frances Christie is a British actress. An icon of the "Swinging Sixties," Christie is the recipient of numerous accolades including an Oscar, a Golden Globe, a BAFTA Award, and a Screen Actors Guild Award. She has appeared in six films ranked in the British Film Institute's BFI Top 100 British films of the 20th century, and in 1997, she received the BAFTA Fellowship.
Some people enjoy celebrity. I admire those who do, because if you're going to go through it, you might as well enjoy it.
I don't think I would have been a good mother. Being a parent brings immense responsibility. It's a Herculean task. It would be almost too much for me.
My family said that I wanted to act even when I was a child living on a tea plantation in the jungle in India.
The little things that made up the fabric of the first six years of my life were suddenly ripped away, and I didn't have anyone around me who loved me. Not one single person.
There were some films I refused because the feminist aspect was a bit wonky.
I've never quite understood why people marry; marriage is just an invented structure.
It takes me time to realize things; I'm a speedy person but a slow thinker.
I did things like Shampoo and Heaven Can Wait. I don't know what those films were about. The women I played in them were not very empowered.
I was born with a need to be the center of attention, and, of course, you're the center of the world when you're acting.
Men don't want any responsibility, and neither do I.
It's quite hard for me being an actress because I actually don't like attention.
As I became very defined in my personal politics, I turned down some films that I slightly regret now; I'm not going to say what they were.
I'd never been content in America.
I regret that I wasn't the kind of person who could enjoy celebrity. It embarrassed me too much.
The status quo and the media is doing everything it can to fry children's brains and make them grow up maladjusted.
Early on, I found the attention completely embarrassing. I'd cringe if I saw my picture on the cover of a magazine.
I never will have peace of mind. I'm not constructed that way. Some things in life can be horrible.
I basically put myself into directors' hands and let them tell me what to do, and the more they told me what to do, the more I liked it.
I see stardom very clearly as a construct that's been created in order to sell things.
I remember becoming aware of women's issues and inequality. It became glaringly clear to me when I was living in America that women are regarded as less intelligent than men.
Altman works in such an interesting way, letting things occur in the film even if he didn't particularly plan them.
I was utilized because I have a certain face that works well in cinema, and I'm used to making myself look as good as possible.
Children can only take so much, and they deal with it however they can.
Living in America, I became aware of many issues and went through a period of politicization.
When I came back to Britain, I realized that I was no longer a very young woman. I had to meet my new consciousness, my new age, with roles that reflected it somewhat.
Happiness is the absence of suffering. I think it's an interesting way of looking at it. I think the absence of suffering exists very rarely in the world we live in.
I'm not in the advertising business, but I think it would be very nice if people went to see the film Hamlet, because it was made with love and integrity.
I think I've got something when I'm onscreen, but that's nothing to do with acting or talent.
Most of the time I spent in America, I was having a love affair with some American or other. I was just passing through but stayed because of these chaps.
I started noticing how stained the pavements are in London. The pavements in Beverly Hills aren't used; in London, they're used for everything. It doesn't matter how much they're cleaned, they still reflect light.
It's quite hard for me being an actress because I actually don't like attention
I don't think men see any lusty sexiness in me. The appealing thing is an air of abandonment. Men don't want any responsibility, and neither do I.
Living in America, I became aware of many issues and went through a period of politicization
I was born with a need to be the center of attention, and, of course, you're the center of the world when you're acting
I think I've got something when I'm onscreen, but that's nothing to do with acting or talent
I started noticing how stained the pavements are in London. The pavements in Beverly Hills aren't used; in London, they're used for everything. It doesn't matter how much they're cleaned, they still reflect light
I was utilized because I have a certain face that works well in cinema, and I'm used to making myself look as good as possible
I think there has always been an obsession with youth and beauty. What's missing is the equal obsession with respect for…older people…and their wisdom and knowledge and courage.
I've never quite understood why people marry; marriage is just an invented structure
I'd never been content in America
I'm not in the advertising business, but I think it would be very nice if people went to see the film Hamlet, because it was made with love and integrity
I never dreamed I'd like any city as well as London. San Francisco is exciting, moody, exhilarating. I even love the muted fogs.