A Quote by Sara Cox

I'm really quite girly. — © Sara Cox
I'm really quite girly.

Quote Topics

I'm quite unusual in directing terms: I'm a woman. I'm quite a girly girl. I was never academic.
As a little girl, I really hated pink, for instance, and I didn't like wearing dresses. I didn't want to be a girly girl then, but now I love being a girly girl!
"Girly" can be limiting if you're told it's the only option. I don't think the solution is to get rid of the girly stuff or decide it's oppressive and get mad at a singer or book for not ACCURATELY REPRESENTING ALL WOMEN. There just needs to be more options for girls who don't identify with the girly aesthetic, and can broaden the idea of what being a girl means. Similarly, there needs to be more of that stuff that can be aesthetically girly, but feminist in the actual message.
I am quite girly.
I'm not girly girly enough to care how I look on TV, or if I'm wearing the correct make up.
I liked the girly cartoons. I was very much a girly-girl.
I like to think I have quite a few different styles - sometimes it's a bit rock n' roll, other times more girly and feminine.
I'm like a dude. Jordans are my favorite. I wear them all the time for shows. I can get girly-girly when I want to, but I can't perform in heels. I would bust my face open on stage, and we don't want that.
I'm not really a girly girl.
I have been very lucky, because I have quite an innocent face and a lot of people are looking for a character who is tough and yet soft and slightly girly. That's why they call me up.
Nothing's too girly and nothing's too masculine. But I do love color, and maybe that's a little girly - especially pink.
I've been really in touch with my girly side.
I've never really been a girly-girl.
I didn't have a sense of how to dress. I still don't really, but, like, back then, I truly had no sense of how to dress because I wanted to be a tomboy - I thought I was a tomboy, but secretly wanted to be girly, but didn't know the first thing about making myself girly. So I ended up like wearing just like sweatpants to school with, like, long T-shirts that I got on family vacations. And it was just weird.
It's nice to actually look done-up, because people see a different side of me, the more girly side. Obviously, I can't do that with cycling. I can't go with nice girly hair and full make-up.
I want someone to say, "I love you and that's all I really know." That's the girly girl in me.
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