Top 15 Quotes & Sayings by Tom Wopat

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American actor Tom Wopat.
Last updated on April 15, 2025.
Tom Wopat

Thomas Steven Wopat is an American actor and singer. He first achieved fame as Lucas K. "Luke" Duke on the long-running television action/comedy series The Dukes of Hazzard. Since then, Wopat has worked regularly, most often on the stage in musicals and in supporting television and movie roles. He was a semi-regular guest on the 1990s comedy series Cybill, and he had a small role as U.S. Marshal Gil Tatum in Django Unchained (2012). Wopat also has a recurring role as Sheriff Jim Wilkins on the television series Longmire. Additionally, Wopat has recorded several albums of country songs and pop standards, scoring a series of moderately successful singles in the 1980s and 1990s.

I have no experience performing that music live in front of an audience. So that remains to be seen. I'm very excited to see what that's going to be like.
With Schubert, a lot of the melodies are very simple, but he's in this groove. He's in touch with his heart.
As I've gone along, I felt like I was discovering an aspect of my voice that I didn't know was there: an ability to interpret a song in a way that makes it more accessible. — © Tom Wopat
As I've gone along, I felt like I was discovering an aspect of my voice that I didn't know was there: an ability to interpret a song in a way that makes it more accessible.
There were a couple of years when I wanted to be a football player, but I really always wanted to be a singer.
I'm facing upstage, with my back to the audience, and the spotlight comes up on my back as I start singing.
When Billie Holiday sings a song, I hear the song, but I always hear her and her truth.
When you're doing the traditional musicals, singing songs that are 40 and 50 years old, you realize there's a reason why those musicals are hits. These are amazing songs!
I think now I'm being taken a little more seriously. That's pure conjecture on my part.
I listen to Steely Dan. I really like Steely Dan.
It's amazing to hear, as a voice matures and then starts to decline, what kind of emotion is still conveyed by a really good vocalist.
There's a guy at the record company who's 30, and he says, I would not listen to these songs except in this context. Somehow the recording process, the arrangements, make it more accessible.
I've made it clear to my agents that I want more interesting stuff.
I sang opera, I sang show tunes. I got into a rock band for a while. I've sung a lot of different things.
I did I Love My Wife on Broadway in 1978, and then went into television land. Now things are starting to come together in the way I thought they might when I was a kid.
The country experience was more of a departure. When you consider my education and my upbringing, you can see that was more of country rock outgrowth of my popular music aspirations.
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