Harry Dean Stanton Quotes


Harry Dean Stanton

I`ve been rather like a cat. I`m finicky and I`ve done a lot of things, and made career choices, missed meetings and so forth that would have made me a much bigger actor, I think. But, by the same token, that would have demanded more of my time, too.

I`m a late bloomer. It`s just a matter of how you evolve; of what your pace is. Hopefully, the older you get the more you grow. So, that has been my speed, the beat of my drum. I march to the beat of a different drum -- you`ll pardon me for using this expression.

I felt very much at home on the stage, more so than off it because I could express everything that I couldn`t express elsewhere -- yes, anger, but also tenderness. It`s not always easy to be as gentle as you wish to be.

As a child, I felt rage against adults who didn`t treat me as a person, adults that were brutalized themselves by having an angry, vindictive God watching them all the time. I come from a broken home and I realize it`s the rule rather than the exception.

Acting is my connection to the community, with the world at large. I hope what I do benefits the community without being moralizing.

California is full of Mexican culture and Mexican music.

I`ve always felt as an outsider. I`ve been rebellious against any iconoclastic thing. It`s true about the industry, but also about society as a whole. I don`t blame anyone, but I think that society is negative in that people are terrified to be free. I was born on the edge of the mountains in Kentucky and now although I live in Hollywood I still feel more related to nature. It`s an attitude. I have a pool, but it`s to do laps in, not a status symbol.

The band I`ve played with for 10 or 12 years now, we`ve been all over, but we mostly play in LA.

Speech lessons probably did more for my singing voice - they teach you breathing, resonance.

I just want to say, good night, sweet prince, may flights of angels sing thee to thy rest.

I was working with professional actors.

I learn about myself. There is no self. You learn you`re not a self. You learn you`re nothing. Ultimately. Hopefully.

But I`m not imaginative. I couldn`t look into the future, like Star Wars or Robots or anything like that.

I don`t believe in singing lessons. You can sing or you can`t.

You want people to feel something when you tell a story,whether they feel happy or whether they feel sad.

I really liked the Mariachi singing in Westerns.

It`s certainly not an ideal situation. I don`t want to be whipping myself to the point where I have no joy in doing it, you know? But that has been a problem with too many artists -- too much pain and not enough joy. I want to be able to work and enjoy it more and it takes a lifetime to learn that. I`m enjoying it more and more; I`m learning that. Someone printed on a Thai temple, "How joyous I am now that I`ve learned there`s no such thing as happiness." Pretty good, huh?

Early on the whole point of acting was mostly getting a job and then the experience of doing it. But when I did Ride in the Whirlwind (1965) with Jack Nicholson in 1965 I discovered there was more to it than that. It was a key film for me because of that. Jack told me not to do anything, just let the wardrobe do the acting. It was a great revelation that became an acting principle. To be rather than to do. You have to behave on screen as much as you do in real life. You don`t kill anyone in life, but you understand the anger that may bring it about.

I`ve always been a singer; it`s not new to me. I`ve been singing since I was a child. I`ve always had a guitar and a harmonica and I played drums in high school -- in a marching band, anyway. I like different kinds of music and I`m exploring them: ballads, blues, blues-rock, country rock, whatever. I`m just focusing on singing a lot so I can get good at it. But don`t say I play "country music." It`s just another label, like "character actor." One term simply can`t say it all.

I play myself all the time, on camera and off. What else can I do?

Heisenberg, Max Plank and Einstein, they all agreed that science could not solve the mystery of the universe.

I`ve never been ambitious about recording.

I know little stories that happen to people around me, and I can repeat that in a way that has some color.

I`ve received a lot of compliments. People come right up to me on the street. They recognize me.

Usually, I just play myself. Whatever psychological traumas or conflicts I`m going through at the time I try to put into the role. Sometimes it`s quite a feat to pull off, but sometimes it works. If it doesn`t correspond to the dilemmas of the character, then I don`t do the film.

Ultimately the atomic physicists - (`Albert Einstein (I)`, Niels Bohr, [Prof. Dr. Martin Heisenberg) - all agreed that science couldn`t answer the mystery of the universe. So I was impressed with all that. Once it gets organized - even if it`s Buddhism or Taoism or Kabbalah - I`m not a member. Einstein said Buddhism was the only religion that could cope with modern scientific needs. So they arrived at the same place the Buddhists did 2,500 years ago. There`s no answer to any of it. That`s liberating. It`s an enlightening concept.

I`m not really into religion.

I have a good ear for languages.

I took speech training. I took a few voice lessons in college.

You want people walking away from the conversation with some kernel of wisdom or some kind of impact.

(on his role in Paris, Texas (1984)) The whole film evolved on a very organic level. It almost had a documentary feel to it. It wasn`t odd to be in the lead, I took the same approach as I would to any other part. I play myself as totally as I possibly can. My own Harry Dean Stanton act . . . I don`t know whatever happened to Travis. I`d say . . . it`s me. Still searching for liberation, or enlightenment, for lack of a better way to put it, and realizing that it might happen, it might not.

I sing and play guitar and harmonica. I`ve been doing it for a long time.

(on his disdain for labels) When you label something, you dismiss it.

Hopefully it`s a life positive thing that I`ve been been blessed to be balled into for a lack of a better way to put it. I find younger people less conditioned and therefore more alive. I don`t take a paternal or authority position with them; I don`t play mentor. I try to relate to them on a peer level. I`m trying to function totally in the moment.

I like to stay home and watch television. The Game Show channel, mostly.






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