Vincente Minnelli Quotes


Vincente Minnelli

West Side Story was terribly important because of the style of the dancing and the gangs of New York.

I use colors to bring fine points of story and character.

Color can do anything that black-and-white can.

The Long, Long Trailer (1954) actually happened and the man wrote a book about it. Father of the Bride, same thing; a banker wrote that who had never written anything else.

But surrealism is present in most of my pictures.

It`s the story that counts.

I had given up the theater and everything propelled me into entertainment. And I didn`t resist it.

Nowadays the audience has changed. No one can anticipate the audience.

I seem to be drawn to things that actually happen.

But I went down to Venezuela and spend a few weeks going through jungles. It`s fantastic looking.

It`s always the story that interests me.

Cedric Gibbons was the grand cardinal of the art department.

Dali was the great painter then and surrealism was a way of life.

I`ve worked with an awful lot of people. Katy Hepburn, Spencer Tracy.

I always liked the Van Gogh story because I was terribly involved in that.

We shot that in all the real places where Van Gogh worked.

But I think musicals are going to have to deal with important subjects.

I learn new things all the time.

No, I only like whether I like the story or not, essentially see something in it that isn`t completely there.

In the Thirties, when I was in New York, I did the first surrealistic ballet in a show of mine.

But the idea of a man being killed during an episode of love and coming back as a woman started to impress me more and more and more.

I allow an area for improvisation because the chemical things actors bring to stories make it not work.

That`s what I think musicals will come to. No backstage stories, nothing of that sort.

Designing Woman was written for the screen.

But I don`t compare myself to anybody.

If anybody reads a story in a magazine or book, different pictures compete in their minds.

The Pirate is surrealism and so, in a curious way, is Father of the Bride.

I see wonderful films by Bertolucci, Visconti, and Fellini.

I made three films with Douglas, two with Charles Boyer.

You have to be a producer nowadays. You have to find the subject, find the writer, find the cameraman, cast it, and then you go to a producer.

Having started as a designer I have a lot to do with settings and costumes, because I think they relate to the story and character, explain it.

Fortunately, John Houseman is a marvelous writer and he sat in on so many story conferences. He worked with Welles, you know, and he`s a marvelous man.

American films are terribly popular all over the world and American movie stars are terribly important. I don`t know why.

I started out to be a painter and was born into the theater.

I always have coffee without sugar, you know. Just cream.






Navigation Boxes
Academy Award for Best Director
Vincente Minnelli
Films directed by Vincente Minnelli
Brigadoon (1954)
Gigi (1958)
I Dood It (1943)
Kismet (1955)
Lust for Life (1956)
Madame Bovary (1949)
The Clock (1945)
The Pirate (1948)
The Sandpiper (1965)
Undercurrent (1946)
Vincente Minnelli
Golden Globe Award for Best Director
Vincente Minnelli
Golden Globe Award for Best Director (1943–1965)
Vincente Minnelli
Academy Award for Best Director (1941–1960)
Vincente Minnelli