Donna Mills Quotes


Donna Mills

Scarlett O`Hara didn`t think she was manipulating. That`s just the way she got what she wanted.

You know, when they called me about the role, I thought Knots Landing was a show about a houseboat with Andy Griffith!

I really want to spend as much time as I can with my daughter and really participate in her growing up. I`m very active in her school.

Even colors were important to me. If it was a somber scene, the colors were muted and dark. If it was a happy or seductive scene, the colors were brighter.

I was tired of playing the goodie-two-shoes.

One of my favorite movies is The Little Foxes.

I was always cutting dialogue out when we were rehearsing, and when I produced movies, too. I felt that people don`t say things in life - they act, they do things. I always wanted my characters doing, rather than saying what they were doing - which was redundant.

I was brought up Catholic, and my family is still very religious.

If there is anything I would do differently in my life, it is that I would study business more. I`m trying to teach my daughter Chloe at an early age about investing and money so she`s not afraid of it.

I also loved musicals because I was a dancer.

Rita Hayworth in Gilda... there`s not a shot of her in that movie that isn`t gorgeous.

The lighting is so important. One thing that makes me nuts about the lighting now is that they spend an enormous amount of time lighting the set, the background. But the most important thing in the scene is the actor.

There were episodes where I would wear seven or eight outfits. It took a lot of time to get those together. What the character wears is very essential to how I create the character.

My father was a middle manager at an oil company, but I never knew anything about his work. Whatever business acumen I have just got gleaned over the years.

Abby would do things that weren`t very ethical, but she was never evil. She had a humanity that characters like her on the other soaps didn`t have.

A lot of actors just do whatever they do, and wherever the camera is, it is. They don`t pay much attention, but I always did. I was always very close to the camera crew. They were my best buddies, no matter what movie or show I was doing.

You really have to love the work. You can`t look for stardom. That`s a by-product.

I feel more comfortable in front of a camera than anywhere else.

I`m back to doing everything I used to, loving life as ever.

My message is - keep moving. If you do, you`ll keep arthritis at bay.

I kept bugging them about making it more upscale, because I felt Abby, through her cleverness and business sense, was a character who would move up. And that`s what she did.

I always wanted to go against hat grain because it was too restricting.

I always wore the highest heels possible, because the other women on the show were tall.

I always wanted to know what lens they were on, how close they were. I didn`t do it with a plan in mind, but I would instinctively gear what I was doing toward what lenses they were using.

I thought it was very important that femininity wasn`t lost.

Early on in my career, I`d go into the makeup trailer, and they`d spend an hour doing my makeup, and I would hate it. I`d go into the bathroom, wash it off and start over again, which took an enormous amount of time. So I just started doing it myself.

I found through my fan mail that women... really wanted a role model.






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