Top 33 Quotes & Sayings by Kristen Johnston

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American actress Kristen Johnston.
Last updated on September 18, 2024.
Kristen Johnston

Kristen Angela Johnston is an American actress. Best known for her work on television sitcoms, she twice won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for her role as Sally Solomon in 3rd Rock from the Sun. She starred as divorce attorney Holly Franklin on The Exes, and as recovering addict Tammy Diffendorf on Mom. She has also appeared in such films as Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999), The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas (2000), Ice Age (2002), Music and Lyrics (2007), and Bride Wars (2009).

I was such a dork. I was too big. I was really gangly.
May I say, if you were suddenly put into a woman's body, wouldn't you be slightly interested in your breasts, and why people look at certain parts of you, and why certain parts move like they do?
To actually be allowed to be beautiful is a total first for me. — © Kristen Johnston
To actually be allowed to be beautiful is a total first for me.
But this show reminds me that there are other aspects to me besides the fact that I'm a funny chick.
Onstage, I was never the ingenue.
I like people-watching and fading into crowds.
I literally felt like a freak, which is another aspect of the role of Sally that I relate to: total outsider.
I want to play a Disney villainess so badly.
I am, uh... a 6 foot tall woman, I feel like I'm a healthy size, I'm not anorexic; and I feel that people who aren't anorexic are punished... for not being anorexic.
I think Janeane Garofalo is incredibly funny, and I love Dennis Miller.
I spent 10 years in New York doing theater.
I was voted Biggest Ham and Likeliest to Become a Celebrity.
When you're that tall, people talk about it all the time.
If you love it, and work really hard at it, it will really happen, I believe. I'm living proof.
It was only when I moved to New York that I realized tall is good.
I'm a strong person, but I'd never resort to violence.
I'd so much rather people think I was funny than pretty.
My way was not to be the petite, gorgeous, little cheerleader. My way of getting by was making people laugh.
I was born in Washington, D.C., and I was raised in Milwaukee.
I don't consider myself a goody-goody, but I like to be perceived as classy.
I've always just gone with the best role, and I don't care if it's in theater, film or television.
And to be different is great. You don't want to be the same.
I really came out to L.A. to take the money and run.
I was a full foot taller than any child my age.
It's a very lonely place, being an addict. — © Kristen Johnston
It's a very lonely place, being an addict.
Yes, creative people are more prone to addiction or addictive behavior. But, equally as prone is your mailman, your mother, your brother, your friend, the guy who does your banking. It's everywhere. The thing that happens in the press sometimes is Whitney Houston. She was just an addict. Just like your uncle Steve.
Right now one in three teenagers meets the medical criteria for addiction, which is scary. I'm so driven because when I walked into rehab, I was like, "Am I still drunk? Did the guys give me the wrong address? Am I at a summer camp?" And it kills them. Deaths attributed to drugs and alcohol have overtaken all other emergency-room deaths.
Royal Young has accomplished a rare feat in his fresh and riveting debut: he manages to recount his fascinating youth and unconventional family with a mixture of humor, scathing honesty and tenderness. Much more than simply a book about a kid who dreams of stardom, Fame Shark is a thoughtful, hilarious and moving love letter to his family and the Lower East Side of New York City.
I am, uh ... a 6 foot tall woman, I feel like I'm a healthy size, I'm not anorexic; and I feel that people who aren't anorexic are punished ... for not being anorexic.
I think that there are many different ways of getting and staying sober. Like religion, I just don't think that one way is the only way.
I think it became blurry because I grew up in a very private family. I mixed privacy and secrecy up somewhere along the line. Everything became a secret, and I thought that was how you should live. Lying about everything. The mask I put on as a kid to survive was the funny lady. Then the funny person all of a sudden became harder to do without substances. Substances let me keep the mask on longer. Until it doesn't work anymore and you're just a mess.
In some roles I have to wear fur, and I always make sure it's fake, like in Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me. Faux fur is great because it shows people that faux can look fabulous.
My fantasy life made me survivor. One day I knew that me, this skinny, ugly girl who was only invited to slumber parties when they were forced to - someday I knew I would be someone. That was my driving goal. It wasn't to be famous. I didn't want furs and signing autographs, I didn't care about any of that. I wanted to be someone other than myself.
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