Quote by Meryl Streep
I have a very busy life, and not many people who have a career and

I have a very busy life, and not many people who have a career and four kids go out a lot to the movies. – Meryl Streep

Other quotes by Meryl Streep

Integrate what you believe in every single area of your life. Take your heart to work and ask the most and best of everybody else, too. – Meryl Streep

Category:
work
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Theres no road map on how to raise a family: its always an enormous negotiation. – Meryl Streep

Category:
Family
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All an actor has is their blind faith that they are who they say they are today, in any scene. – Meryl Streep

Category:
Faith
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Other Quotes from
movies
category

There are characters in movies who I call film characters. They dont exist in real life. They exist to play out a scenario. They can be in fantastic films, but they are not real characters what happens to them is not lifelike. – Philip Seymour Hoffman

Category:
movies

De Niro was a hero of mine. And Sean Penn. But Ive realized I cant operate at that level of intensity. Thats okay for movies. On TV, when you live with horror day in and day out, you have to protect yourself. – Christopher Meloni

Category:
movies

Even though I make those movies, I find myself wishing that more of those magic moments could happen in real life. – Jane Seymour

Category:
movies

I make movies that nobody will see. Ive made movies that even I have never seen. – Christopher Walken

Category:
movies

Random Quotes

I get caught up in my bubble of reading, writing, or music. – Antonio Banderas

Category:
Music

While Ive had a great distaste for whats usually called song in modern poetry or for whats usually called music, I really dont think of speech as so far from song. – David Antin

Category:
Poetry

In the Soviet army it takes more courage to retreat than advance. – Joseph Stalin

Category:
Courage

Things happen too quickly, crisis follows crisis, the soil of our minds is perpetually disturbed. Each of us, to relieve his feelings, broadcasts his own running commentary on the preposterous and bewildering events of the hour: and this, nowadays, is what passes for conversation. – Jan Struther, Mrs. Miniver, 1930s

Category:
Society