Top 99 Quotes & Sayings by Peter Falk

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American actor Peter Falk.
Last updated on September 18, 2024.
Peter Falk

Peter Michael Falk was an American film and television actor. He is best known for his role as Lieutenant Columbo in the long-running television series Columbo, for which he won four Primetime Emmy Awards and a Golden Globe Award (1973).

I still get fan mail for Columbo.
You talk about what a director, he was smart. He said, Turn the camera on!
When I was young, I was looking for people to look up to - role models I could respect. — © Peter Falk
When I was young, I was looking for people to look up to - role models I could respect.
I remember being amazed that actors had a union. I thought only coal miners had unions, or guys that worked in automobile plants. That's an indication of how naive I was.
The only mountain that I would still like to climb: I'd like to break 85.
If it wasn't for the Mark Twain Masquers, I don't know where my life would have gone.
In 1958, I was shooting a movie in Florida, and I decided to go to Havana, Cuba, to see what it was like.
The entertainment industry is loaded with extraordinarily talented people. But the true, genuine originals, they're rare.
When I was a kid, the idea of gettin' paid to paint your face... listen, I grew up in Ossining, New York, a nice little town by the Hudson, and nothin' ever interested me except being your usual high school big shot, which I was an' loved it, played all the sports and goofed around, always out on the street with the guys, everything was funny t'me.
I got a regret: That I started acting so late. I was 27, and guys who start at 18 or so, there's this kinda continuity of friendships they form in the profession by startin' young, I've never had that.
You thought the stage, you thought Broadway: that was the pot at the end of the rainbow. The idea of being in Hollywood was like going to the Moon or Mars.
When I go see a basketball game, I'm always in the front row. I always have a table at a restaurant; I never have trouble getting a taxi.
To be totally sincere, I'd surely be a better actor today if I hadn't played Columbo all these years. — © Peter Falk
To be totally sincere, I'd surely be a better actor today if I hadn't played Columbo all these years.
I thought actors were artists and that artists had to be European.
Sometimes I was in school plays, but only when the kid they'd originally picked got sick and they asked me to substitute.
I never understood a word John Cassavetes said. And I think he did that deliberately.
Before we ever had a script or anything, I was attracted to the idea of playing a character that housed within himself two opposing traits.
I do figure every angle of a guy I'm acting - but not consciously 'til afterward.
To be a theater actor, I think you have to do plays all the time.
I never turned a part down when they offered me money.
The female body is awesome.
I think people identify with Columbo because he is an average man.
I lose things. I am preoccupied. I am misty. Eyeglasses? I go through eyeglasses like tissue.
They wouldn't take me in the navy because of my glass eye. So I joined the merchant navy, who allowed monocular crew if you worked in the kitchens. You're not wanted on deck or in the engine room with one eye, but you're good to fire up the ovens and cook hundreds of chops.
It became the joke of the neighbourhood. If the umpire ruled me out on a bad call, I'd take the fake eye out and hand it to him.
My idea of Heaven is to wake up, have a good breakfast, and spend the rest of the day drawing.
Even the first year of 'Columbo,' 'Columbo' was Jesus Christ, No. 1, you know.
I did do my own stunts.
I came to Hollywood and nobody knew me. I was on a coupla TV shows.
Sure, I miss some things about the stage. The thing I like is the immediacy. But then I complain, 'I gotta do the same part for six months.'
If your mind is at work, we're in danger of reproducing another cliche. If we can keep our minds out of it and our thoughts out of it, maybe we'll come up with something original.
My father's whole life was work. He had a retail store in Ossining, New York, and I mean, he was down there at 6:15 every morning. The store didn't open until 9, but he hadda be down there. That's all he knew.
I just keep working.
I had two ambitions: One was to be in The Actors Studio, and the other was to walk into a bar where actors hung out, and everyone would know that I was a professional actor and I would be accepted.
I've worked with some terrific actors. The list of guys that came on the 'Columbo' show, I mean they were world-class actors from all over the world - Oskar Werner, Laurence Harvey, Donald Pleasence, you know... foreigners.
I used to have this idea that you can spend years in the movies and TV and then, at the drop of a hat, say 'Oh, I'll go back and do the theater.'
When I was a kid growing up, you maybe secretly wanted to be an actor, but you never said.
The whole thing was an actor's dream - getting a character that tickles you so much you can't wait to act as him. — © Peter Falk
The whole thing was an actor's dream - getting a character that tickles you so much you can't wait to act as him.
I had no idea when I graduated from high school and then from graduate school what I wanted to do with my life. I had no idea that I was ever going to be an actor.
I wanted to become an actor, but I didn't want to admit it.
There were no artists in Ossining, which was the home of Sing Sing prison. Most of the parents of the guys I knew were guards there.
There's a bit of a problem. The script that I like, the network doesn't like. The script that they like, I don't like.
In the beginning, when you're acting in amateur theater and off-Broadway, it was unheard of that anyone else would get your costume. And it was important to get a good costume. You put time into that.
The first time I ever spoke to John Cassavetes was at a Lakers game. I got up to go for a hot dog, and he was coming in the opposite direction. I don't know who said hello first, but we started talking, and it turned out that he went to high school with my first wife, Alice.
I'm old fashioned. I really think you should know how to draw before you start painting. I use charcoal and graphite; I put a skylight in. In my house, I turned the garage into an art studio. So I'm awash in art studios.
Hartford had the Mark Twain Masquers, which was fantastic. They had been in business I don't know how many years. They knew how to build sets and sell tickets and put on a play. My day started at night. When I left the office, that's when my day began.
In the theater, you didn't have any marks. Your instincts in rehearsal told you what the blocking was. On film, they reversed it. They decided ahead of time what your instincts were, before you even arrived.
I've never worried about the grand concepts. — © Peter Falk
I've never worried about the grand concepts.
Going to Hartford turned out to be the luckiest thing that ever happened to me.
I'm just looking to get through the day.
The celebrity craze is a little much. But it's good for me, so you don't bite the hand that feeds you.
Children ran up to me shouting, 'Columbo!' At first, it gave me great pleasure, but later, I said to myself that those children should have had their own heroes instead of admiring a cop from Los Angeles.
Columbo was never comfortable if somebody considered him unique or smart.
I didn't become an actor until I was an old man of 28 or 29. I declared to the world that I was an actor. Nobody heard me, but I did declare it.
I like stories that grow, that have unpredictable layers. As opposed to Hollywood movies that start out with a lot of shock and noise and peter out into an unconvincing cliche.
What's the name of that famous museum in Paris? The Louvre? I went through that place in 20 minutes.
I watch practically no TV - ah, what the hell do I watch? Oh, I was for a long time addicted to CNN.
When I was growing up in Ossining, N.Y., playing pool with the guys, the thought that any one of us might become an actor was as far-fetched as being knighted by the queen of England.
Usually, I get hired because I'm tall.
I was a street-guy villain. I was a street-corner villain. I was an illiterate villain. All rough edges.
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