When I die, my epitaph should read: She Paid the Bills. That’s the story of my private life.
Meaning of the quote
This quote suggests that the actress Gloria Swanson's main focus in life was on practical matters like paying her bills, rather than on more glamorous or exciting aspects of her life. She seems to be saying that her private life was centered around the mundane task of making sure her bills were paid, which she sees as the most important part of her story. The quote implies that even though she was a famous actress, her daily life was primarily about taking care of her financial responsibilities.
About Gloria Swanson
Gloria Swanson was an American actress who found fame in the 1920s acting in silent films. She received three Academy Award nominations, including for her iconic role in the 1950 film Sunset Boulevard. Swanson started her career after being discovered at a young age and went on to become a global superstar, before transitioning to producing and TV appearances in her later years.
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More quotes from Gloria Swanson
All they had to do was put my name on a marquee and watch the money roll in.
American actress (1899-1983)
Writing the story of your own life is a bit like drilling your own teeth.
American actress (1899-1983)
I entered the cosmetics industry because I wanted more women to use cosmetics made with safe, healthful ingredients.
American actress (1899-1983)
The fuss that actors began making about the difficulty of shifting to sound struck me as perfectly foolish.
American actress (1899-1983)
Nobody gets anything for nothing.
American actress (1899-1983)
All creative people should be required to leave California for three months every year.
American actress (1899-1983)
We lived on the Key West Army Base. Key West for me was a tropical island paradise.
American actress (1899-1983)
I was the first celebrity in pictures to be marrying a titled European.
American actress (1899-1983)
Tennessee Williams was a gifted talker with a beautiful accent and we had lots of things in common.
American actress (1899-1983)
Sunset Boulevard opened in August 1950, and it was pronounced the best movie ever made about Hollywood.
American actress (1899-1983)
The Paramount executives were so pleased with Sunset Boulevard that they asked me to do a publicity tour.
American actress (1899-1983)
When I die, my epitaph should read: She Paid the Bills. That’s the story of my private life.
American actress (1899-1983)
The day I initiated divorce proceedings against Michael Farmer, I was ready to retire to a desert cave and rethink my life.
American actress (1899-1983)
At 26 I felt myself a victim rather than a victor in the realm of pictures.
American actress (1899-1983)
I became a fanatic about healthy food in 1944.
American actress (1899-1983)
The only time I ever went hunting I remembered it as a grisly experience.
American actress (1899-1983)
I am a very pragmatic person.
American actress (1899-1983)
The Sennett system of making pictures was actually fun. You never knew what the person next to you was going to do.
American actress (1899-1983)
After 16 years in pictures I could not be intimidated easily, because I knew where all the skeletons were buried.
American actress (1899-1983)
One of the networks sent me a TV set to watch. I didn’t care for the medium. It depressed me.
American actress (1899-1983)
The first feminine feature that goes, with advancing age, is the neck.
American actress (1899-1983)
I doubted that there were Communists hiding behind every corporation desk and director’s chair.
American actress (1899-1983)
If you’re 40 years old and you’ve never had a failure, you’ve been deprived.
American actress (1899-1983)
Your body is the direct result of what you eat as well as what you don’t eat.
American actress (1899-1983)
I had starred in more than 30 successful films, six in a row directed by Cecil B. De Mille.
American actress (1899-1983)
Sam Wood, the director, made most of his money as a real estate agent; there was nothing of the temperamental artist about him.
American actress (1899-1983)
As Daddy said, life is 95 percent anticipation.
American actress (1899-1983)
My mother and I could always look out the same window without ever seeing the same thing.
American actress (1899-1983)
There was no place at all for me in my father’s military world.
American actress (1899-1983)
My sculpture is very personal; for years my subjects were family and close, close friends.
American actress (1899-1983)
In two months Joseph Kennedy had taken over my entire life, and I trusted him implicitly to make the most of it.
American actress (1899-1983)
From the first moment on the set I was consumed with curiousity about the technical side of shooting a sound picture.
American actress (1899-1983)
I was married when I was 17. I knew nothing. I was full of romance.
American actress (1899-1983)
My greatest debt will always be to the movie-going public of yesterday and today, without whose love and devotion I would have had no story to tell.
American actress (1899-1983)
The major gossip columnists were more concerned with protecting the industry than with gunning down sinners.
American actress (1899-1983)
I’ve given my memoirs far more thought than any of my marriages. You can’t divorce a book.
American actress (1899-1983)
I always anticipated difficulties in order to avoid scenes.
American actress (1899-1983)
I feel sure that unborn babies pick their parents.
American actress (1899-1983)
I didn’t want to spend the rest of my life playing Norma Desmond over and over again.
American actress (1899-1983)
By the time I was 15, my mother had turned me into a real clotheshorse.
American actress (1899-1983)
The English press treated the world premiere of my first talking picture as a major event.
American actress (1899-1983)
Life and death. They are somehow sweetly and beautifully mixed, but I don’t know how.
American actress (1899-1983)
Because I take care of my body, it doesn’t look like the body of a woman of my years.
American actress (1899-1983)
I consider anybody who weighs over 200 pounds fat, and time was when I could not refrain from telling such people so.
American actress (1899-1983)
I am big. It’s the pictures that got small.
American actress (1899-1983)
I was 25 and the most popular celebrity in the world, with the possible exception of my friend Mary Pickford.
American actress (1899-1983)
Much as I cared for Joseph Kennedy, he was a classic example of that person in the arts with lots of brains and drive but little taste or talent.
American actress (1899-1983)
Fame was thrilling only until it became grueling. Money was fun only until you ran out of things to buy.
American actress (1899-1983)