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By AnonymGena Rowlands
After you play a part, you think of it as your own.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
all creative writers need a certain amount of time when they're creating something where nobody should criticize them at all - at all. Even if the criticism is valid or good, they should just shut up, and let that person create. Because at a certain point you have to make it your own - not the world's, but your own.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
Because John Cassavetes was so terrific in live TV, a lot of his friends had not been able to participate in that yet and so they asked if he would gather with them at night when I was at the play and tell them what live TV was like, what you had to adjust to because it was its own medium - it had many things you had to be aware of.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
Bette Davis had very strong opinions and was not afraid to express them. She wasn't afraid of anything that I ever saw. And she was so funny. She's just funny and she was laughing all the time.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
Every sacred cow in the business has to do with economics.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
He[John Cassavetes] was just being an actor. A very successful actor, especially in live TV. He did many wonderful performances.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
I'd wanted to be [an actress] all my life.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
If I have something I like to forget, then I forget it.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
I got a part opposite Edward G. Robinson in a play called Middle of The Night, which Paddy Cheyafsky had written. It played for a long time because everybody just loved Edward G. Robinson, everybody in New York wanted to see it. John and I were married at the time and put into a position where I was working very long evening hours and he was working in the daytime and so there was a lot of spare time.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
I just loved Bette Davis and the fact that I had a chance to work with her [on the 1979 TV movie Strangers: The Story of a Mother and Daughter] was momentous.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
I love independent filmmaking. I don't agree with a lot of it, but that's the point.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
I think I have the only parents in the world who would not have said something against become an actress.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
I think that I was lucky to have that period of time [ like coming to New York] because everything was so exciting and new.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
It was a period when live TV was just starting and getting popular and they took it seriously too. Not so much like TV now. They did Hemingway and Faulkner - and they’re all wonderful artists and it just was very creative at that time.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
It was a very hard play [Woman Under the Influence] to do every night. And John Cassavetes said, "Don't worry. Don't even think about it, you're right. I hadn't thought of that." He said, "Just forget it.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
It was more freedom than I think most people get when they're starting out - or even when they're not starting out. He [John Cassavetes] did his thing and I did whatever I thought.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
I went to the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, which was in Carnegie Hall, which itself was exciting - just to walk into it.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
[John Cassavetes] came backstage afterwards and introduced himself and we talked a bit, and then went for a little coffee at the Russian Tea Room next door. It just...started.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
John [Cassavetes] had shot a great deal of Shadows and I had to go fulfill my contract in California, so he and all the rest of the Shadows cast came out to California and they finished it off and he cut it. He turned the garage into an editing room and he was by then a director of Shadows. That's the only thing he'd directed. But, he loved it.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
John [Cassavetes] loved actors. He gave them a lot of freedom. So if something came up that a certain actor just felt at the moment and said - that kind of improvisation he would accept. He gave very little direction.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
John Cassavetes was a year ahead of me but we met there. What you do when you are at a school for drama, you do a play as opposed to a final. Anyone who wanted to come could just come. So he came, and I can't remember the name of the play, of course, it was a long time ago.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
John Cassavetes was there at night while I was working. After they [with his friends] discussed as much live TV as they felt they needed to, they started improvising scenes just for the fun of it and one of those scenes everybody got very interested in and it turned into Shadows [1959]. That movie was entirely improvised.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
John Cassavetes wrote A Woman Under the Influence as a play. He said, "Hey, I wrote you a play." And I said, "Great, let's read it." I read it and I said, "John, I couldn't do this every night and twice on Wednesday and Saturday".
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
Of course, much easier to do a film when you're doing an extremely emotional part than it is doing it onstage over and over especially.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
Paddy Chayefksy was writing and it was a time where everybody was happy to be there [on TV].
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
People in independent film have a passion; they're not in it for the money.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
So after the Shadows he acted and directed. And it worked out very nicely. And he wrote, obviously.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
So I went home and I told my mom that I wanted to quit and be an actress and she said, “Huh, that sounds fascinating. It’s wonderful!” And I told my father and he literally said, “I don’t care if you want to be an elephant trainer if it makes you happy.”
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
When I was in Middle of The Night, MGM came and offered me a contract and I said that when I got out of the play, I'd like to try it. I didn't know anything about making movies but I was certainly finding it interesting.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
When I went to my parents I was at the University of Wisconsin, and I just couldn't wait anymore to go be an actress.
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By AnonymGena Rowlands
You just can't complain about being alive. It's self-indulgent to be unhappy. When asked how she has coped since husband's death.
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