Sarah Jessica Parker Quotes
Top 79 wise famous quotes and sayings by Sarah Jessica Parker
Sarah Jessica Parker Famous Quotes & Sayings
Discover top inspirational quotes from Sarah Jessica Parker on Wise Famous Quotes.
I really love eating, so I love reading about food, and I religiously read the dining section in newspapers.
After all, computers crash, people die, relationships fall apart. The best we can do is breath and reboot.
Graham Norton makes me laugh. I love him. I'm not kidding. I watch him on BBC America every week. He's so fast.
People always assume that I'm some sort of party girl, and that's such a misconception because I like staying home.
The Eskimos have hundreds of word for snow but we've invented three times that many words for relationships. What really defines a relationship?
Often I'll go to the market, and women will say to me: "Let me see your shoes." And then I show them I'm wearing flip-flops.
He's the funniest, smartest person I know. It doesn't mean he doesn't bug me and I'm sure I bug him sometimes.
I'm thinking balls are to men, what purses are to women. It's just a little bag but we'd feel naked in public without it.
I love the opportunity to wear something really special and go to a wonderful event at some great cultural institution.
Just because you donate sperm does not make you a father. I don't have a father. I would never give him the credit or acknowledge him as my father.
It's like reading a book about a life that you will never occupy, but that's the beauty of being transported.
When men attempt bold gestures, generally it's considered romantic. When women do it, it's often considered desperate or psycho.
Come little children, I'll take thee away into a Land of Enchantment. Come little children, the time's come to play here in my Garden of Magic.
Sunscreen! It is a recent discovery and now I can't live without it - that and drinking lots of water and moisturizing.
What I've learned about being a parent is how much you sort of secretly learn from everyone else and how valuable it is.
If you're in a series, you can't quit, you can't work in the theatre and you can't do a movie when you like.
People go to casinos for the same reason they go on blind dates - hoping to hit the jackpot. But mostly, you just wind up broke or alone in a bar.
The great challenge for me is to be all things to all people; I want to be a great mother, and I want to feel good when I'm at work.
You can't live in New York City and be the most important person in town; you just can't. There are too many other important people here.
I took a page from [the playwright] Wendy Wasserstein's book. She said 'I'm not a feminist, I'm a humanist.'
I have a fantastic husband. Here's the honeymoon part: I still think he's the funniest, wittiest, most clever man I've ever known.
I tell my friends married life is boring, but that's just a fun thing to say to make single people feel better.
I love the smell of diapers; I even like when they're wet and you smell them all warm liked a baked good. Love it.
My son doesn't know how flawed I am, how flawed we are. He still likes us so much, and that's so incredible to be around.
I expect I should be more calloused by now, but I am so sensitive about not ever living up to anybody's worst idea about an actor who is well-known.
I knocked part of my tooth out with a scrubbing brush on stage whilst singing 'Hard Knock Life' in Annie.
I never wanted to be a celebrity; I never wanted to be famous. And in my daily life, I work really hard to not trade on it in any way.
I think growing up in a big family taught me a lot of problem solving and how to share and compromise, and that's been helpful in my marriage.
I know that he, Matthew Broderick, doesn't have his laundry done, and that he hasn't had a hot meal in days. That stuff weighs on my mind.
I strangely feel better before I go through hair and makeup. Maybe that's just because I feel like me.
I have a lot of responsibilities outside myself. I have a large family. I want to know I can always be helpful.
I love Jennifer Hudson! She is so lovely on screen. She is so buoyant and youthful off screen as much as on.
When a relationship dies do we ever really give up the ghost or are we forever haunted by the spirits of relationships past?
It's like the riddle of the Sphinx ... why are there so many great unmarried women, and no great unmarried men?
Someone once said that two halves make a whole. And when two halves move in together, it makes a whole lot of stuff.