Best quotes by Carla Gugino

Carla Gugino

Carla Gugino

American actress

Carla Gugino (born August 29, 1971) is an American actress. After appearing in Troop Beverly Hills (1989) and This Boy's Life (1993), she received recognition for her starring roles as Ingrid Cortez in the Spy Kids trilogy (2001–2003), Rebecca Hutman in Night at the Museum (2006), Laurie Roberts in American Gangster (2007), Sally Jupiter in Watchmen (2009), Dr. Vera Gorski in Sucker Punch (2011), Emma Gaines in San Andreas (2015), and Jessie Burlingame in Gerald's Game (2017).

Gugino also starred as the lead character in the crime drama series Karen Sisco (2003), the science fiction series Threshold (2005–2006), the supernatural horror series The Haunting of Hill House (2018), and the crime drama series Jett (2019), and also appeared in The Haunting of Bly Manor (2020).

All quotes by Carla Gugino:

My favorite thing is to have a big dinner with friends and talk about life.

Sexuality is one of the biggest parts of who we are.

I've joked that I would have either become schizophrenic or an actress, but as an actress you can do both.

You can't not be happy around penguins. You're unfortunately happy and cold but the happiness makes up for the coldness.

I always feel like I want to work with people who raise my game, and I can do the same for them, and we can jump off the cliff together.

As an actor, you're naked emotionally; you're revealing yourself emotionally.

I'm a sensualist. My two main indulgences are dark chocolate and massages.

I always think a good sports movie is emblematic in the same way that a great Greek tragedy really has a certain kind of structure, or a Shakespearean play if you're looking at a comedy or a tragedy, is that these are the heights and depths of human emotion.

I'm a huge Wong Kar-Wai fan.

I don't have a favorite genre. I mean, I always sort of base it on instinct. And it does seem to be that after I finish something that is very dramatic, I end up inevitably wanting to do a comedy or something like that.

I'm much more of a kid now than I was when I was a kid. I was the kind of kid who was valedictorian, a straight-A student. My mom used to say, "Please stop studying and get outside."

What I love about him [Robert Rodriguez] is that he understands that actors are transformational. It's a natural instinct to ask people to do what you've seen them do before. Until you see someone do something new, you don't know what they can.

As a creative person, you need to sort of spread your wings and try different things out because each one really does inform the other.

I was a really, really serious kid. And a really kind of controlling kid. Like I had things that, now, people would say are like - there's a name for many disorders as we know - but I would say, "If I pick this rubber band, then this will happen." It was that kind of want to control things, which I think all kids have to some extent.

I can pretty much take care of myself; I don't walk around with much fear.

I was the person who did academics until the middle of the day, then went on auditions. I think there was a moment later in my life where I was like, "What am I doing? Why am I so serious?" .

I'll always take an artistic endeavor over a career move.

I do think that's one of the reasons that acting appealed to me so much: the idea of letting go of control in a controlled environment. Being able to go through the range of intense emotions and jump off the cliff, metaphorically, but in a creative way, and in a way where the structure was really solid.

I feel that's the richest gift that's ever been given to me: I get to do what I love. And it's a really brutal business, and no matter how successful you are you hear "No" more than "Yes."

I have a very strong work ethic, and I'm very grateful for that. But I think there was a moment when I realized, "Oh, I can play a little as well."

I always had challenges when I was younger, because I looked so young but sounded older.

I played the mom in Spy Kids when I was, like, 27. So it was ridiculous. But [Robert Rodriguez] was like, "You know what? If we do our job right, no one will question it." And nobody did.

One of the most important things for an actor is to observe humanity.

My tendency as an actor is, when there's a certain energy, I feel a challenge to match it, to come up to that plate and play on the same level.

You know, I used to be made fun of as a kid for being really articulate; it was sort of like a strange thing.

It is odd there are many movies with many men. But generally movies have one woman, or maybe the older woman and the younger girl.

When my friends have a health concern, they call me. Ive always been a vitamin taker. I also take digestive enzymes and antioxidants, and supplements that help with the thyroid and adrenals for my time-zone changes.

When a sports movie really works, it gets you on all levels, because the stakes are high. It's black and white. It's win or lose.

I find often in Hollywood there are many people who play themselves really beautifully. And certain parts are not that dissimilar from who you are as a person. And there are other parts where you would like to think that you have nothing in common with those characters, but you probably do have more than you think.

My father and my mother separated when I was two.

I love doing serious movies for adults.

I'm intrigued by films that have a singular vision behind them. A lot of studio movies have ten writers by the time they're done. You have a movie testing 200 times, making adjustments according to various people's opinions. It's difficult to have an undistilled vision.

I think the scariest thing to me is to think that somebody would only associate me with one character and that that's all that I would get to play.

Unfortunately, 'chick flick' has become a term to describe most movies that I don't even like. They're these movies that, yes, have women in them but they really don't reflect who women are, and there's something kind of silly or shallow or gossipy about them.

For me, I never, never, from the moment I started acting, had a desire to be famous.

I feel like I'm the only person - or woman, at least - who hasn't read 'Fifty Shades of Grey.

The interesting thing with acting, actually, is that you get to be so many different people that you get to do so much research on so many different things that I've learned so much about brain surgery and about astrophysicist-type of things and traveling to amazing parts of the world.

I generally make a sort of playlist for my iPod for whatever project I'm doing.

I think I'm always trying to subvert conventions, and sometimes it's more successful than others.

I think you always have to go as an artist with instinct, I really do.

I always wanted to be one of those people who were good at many, many things, but from a very early age, I fell in love with acting.

She's a (lesbian), but with a body like that she could get any man she wants.

I kind of knew it wasn't going to be until my 30s that I really hit my stride as an actor.

I'm fiercely protective of my privacy.

I started acting when I was 13, so acting has been, with great fortune, my job since I could get a job.

It's not often that the idea of continuing something for a potentially long period of time sounds exciting to me, because I really am a gypsy by nature.

Sucker Punch' is a big girl power movie.

Personally, just as an actor, I love accents; they're fun.

There is something in these moments of crisis that is really extraordinary about humanity and human beings' resilience and the way in which everyone naturally comes together. I think you see the best in people in those moments for better or for worse and you find your best self.

I think that once somebody sees something, or feels it in the consciousness of society, it starts to allow change for other people.

I think maybe because I moved a lot in my childhood, I'm a little bit of a gypsy by nature.

It's interesting how when you walk into a room in LA there's a sense of what you walk in, as is sort of what you can do. So I spent a lot of time choosing different things to hopefully show people that maybe that's not the case.