Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American actress Rumer Willis.
Last updated on November 25, 2024.
Rumer Glenn Willis is an American actress and singer. She is the eldest daughter of actor Bruce Willis and actress Demi Moore. She has appeared in films Hostage (2005), The House Bunny (2008), Sorority Row (2009) and Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019). She portrayed Gia Mannetti in CBS' teen drama series 90210 (2009–10) and Tory Ash in FOX's musical drama series Empire (2017–18).
Willis won season 20 of ABC's dance competition television series Dancing with the Stars. She made her Broadway debut in Chicago as Roxie Hart on September 21, 2015.
Look, nobody is ever exactly the same as anybody else. You're handed the cards you are for a particular reason, so you follow that path and see where it takes you.
I'm all for the equality.
I think if you have any fear or shame, it's really hard to want to express yourself.
I have been very, very blessed with not having stage parents.
My mom had me when she was 25, and I'm 28 now, and just to even imagine myself three years ago starting to have children and be married and have my career, it's pretty trippy, and I'm so proud and kind of in awe of her.
I definitely understand not entirely fitting in. I think everyone has their own version of feeling out of place and I think one of the great things we have the ability to do is to know it's all right. It's OK to have that awkward phase.
Stay true to your integrity, and if you're doing something that you feel like doesn't represent your integrity, speak up. You have to say that. If you're doing something that doesn't make you feel good, you probably shouldn't be doing it.
I've never wanted to just ride on coat tails. I don't know, if you don't earn something then it doesn't feel as good.
When I was a teenager, I was super-awkward. I don't think I really felt comfortable in my body or with how I looked, and people were nasty.
Love is the only unifier in the world. We've all felt exactly the same way. It'll make you crazy, and it'll make you ecstatic, and that's true for everyone.
Being stick skinny to the extent where you can see your bones through your skin is not a good look. You don't need to be that to be beautiful or to be perfect or to fit in. Who you are is exactly who you should be. You can't let other people dictate your life or how you feel about yourself because then you're not living.
The deepest gift you can learn in life is about self-love, and that's not going to happen overnight.
Everyone has opportunities and different doors that are opened to them in different ways. In the end, if you're talented you'll get work, if you're not, you won't, so it doesn't really matter who you know.
People have such an immediate judgment of me because I have tattoos or because my hair is sometimes crazy.
When I was growing up, I had a nanny who would always play 'The Sound of Music' and 'Bye Bye Birdie,' so I was always listening to that stuff.
I grew up, and I was bullied and very insecure. I hope, if nothing else, if I share enough of my struggle and share what I went through and allow myself to be vulnerable, I'll let people see who I am.
I just found such a love for dancing. If anybody would love to just feel great, not just physically, but you want to feel such confidence, just go and take a ballroom dancing class! I love it more than any kind of workout.
People would say I looked like a man or something called a 'buttaface', which means everything good but her face, or 'potato head' was the big term that everyone used a lot, basically making fun of the way I looked.
When you grow up with parents that are known worldwide and having so much attention from media and all of the tabloid magazines, it's really tough.
As you get older, you realise your parents aren't these superheroes. They're actually people.
My dad says I was an extra in 'Die Hard.' I think it's true.
Totally, if I wasn't trying to be an actor, I would leave L.A. because you can't really have that life here. There's a lot of baggage that comes with being here, like the paparazzi, traffic, and all of it.
For a while I thought about studying medicine at school and becoming a doctor because I've always been interested in psychology and how people's minds operate. But I'm able to explore some of that as an actor and ultimately I think it seems more interesting.
I have an inner drag queen. Or rather, I feel like I was a drag queen in a past life.
Everybody is going to have an opinion on you; not everyone is going to like you. You can't live your life based on other people's opinions of you or let that change what you do or how you feel about yourself, because then you're not living.
Love doesn't care how much money you have. It doesn't care who your parents are. It doesn't care if you're gay, straight, or transgender.
My sisters are my best friends and such incredible women.
My parents always knew that I wanted to act, so it didn't really come as a big surprise. The only thing they told me was that I had to wait until I was 18 so I could get my education out of the way first.
I thought I'd lost a pair of earrings once. They were, like, $50,000. I was terrified.
In high school, I had a much easier time interacting with adults than with my peers.
I would never want the responsibility of being the prettiest girl on screen; it's too much.
Education is very important to my parents and to me.
You can't become what you aren't, or you will start feeling awful about yourself.
If I could find the perfect career of doing television and movies where I could sing, that would be great.
Fear is such a huge thing that holds us back.
The only place you can really find the confidence and the love for yourself is within you, so that has to be what carries you: not all of these external things.
Just in general, no matter what you're doing, be true to yourself. Never let anyone else dictate how you live your life.
Love doesn't care who your parents are.
As you get older you realise your parents aren't these superheroes. They're actually people.
Love doesn't care how much money you have.
I've borrowed tons of jewelry. Most people [in Hollywood] do. But it's your responsibility to keep track of it.
When I was a kid you didn't have Twitter or Instagram where as soon as you walk out of a building a photo of you is up within two minutes or a million people are commenting and saying nasty things. I found a different confidence because I realized that you can't base your self-worth on the opinions of others.
I'm human here, people. I'm not the Dalai Lama. But I'm trying.
I'm obsessed with smells even more than makeup.
Breakup blackout is when you're so upset and you've been crying so much that you basically black out for a couple of days. You wake up to mascara caked on your face and empty ice cream cartons everywhere, and your iTunes has, like, four new really bad romantic comedies you've rented. And your friends are texting you, and for three days you're in this black hole.
You have to be the nice one!
Love is the only unifier in the world. We've all felt exactly the same way. It'll make you crazy and it'll make you ecstatic and that's true for everyone.
I've been on a plane before with more money in jewelry than my life insurance policy, and it's one of the scariest feelings in the world... if you lose it, you have to pay for it yourself, and you don't even get to keep it!
I hate my jaw. I don't know if it's my dad's - I think I'm more like my mother, my littlest sister looks exactly like my dad and my middle sister is a mixture of the two.
Love doesn't care if you're gay, straight, or transgender. Your heart's gonna get broken. You're gonna turn into a crazy person.
Every man worthy of loving you won't make you change yourself.
It's amazing as women how many excuses we make when a guy doesn't call or text. It's unbelievable.
I feel like I have an inner drag queen. Or rather, I feel like I was a drag queen in a past life.