Zitat des Tages von Jackie Cooper:
They had to start shaving my chin when I was 12 years old because light started to pick it up.
The studio didn't ask them to learn their trade, they just worked them, and when that personality or that gimmick or whatever they had ran dry at the box office, they were dropped and out.
So if I keep making mistakes on Broadway or tape or film, producing, directing or acting, I can go along and do it - so long as I'm not investing too much capital in these things.
But I want to do good work, after this series.
I would also like to act, once in a while, but not get up every morning at 5:30 or six o'clock and pound into the studio and get home at 7:30 or eight o'clock at night, or act over and over and over every night on Broadway, either.
Well, they just don't know anything else except that one form of their business, acting, and they don't really want to learn any other part of it, or they would. Directing and producing and putting a show together is very creative, for me.
I hope this series is good work, but it is in the half-hour medium, which is limited to a kind of mediocrity that sponsors are just dying to have right now, and the public, for some reason, is unconsciously demanding.
So then you have to say to yourself: Do I want to be rich, or do I want to do good work?
So I'm in that half-hour business where the most money is, so that eventually I feel like the people that put on the Dupont show, like maybe my artistic effort is going to be a little different.
I just knew how to do the one thing I did, and whether I did it well or not depended on who the director was.
But the working I would always want to do.
From that, I became very anxious to produce something of my own.
So I felt, well, I'll make the money and, with the money, do what I want to do.
There was never any effort made out there to improve the artist.
They thought in terms of: whatever you had that started you at the box office, this was it.
If it's boring, then it's tiring.
To me, the series was the end of the actor, when the series ended.
So whatever I might have started to learn at that age was all undone by the next director and next crew in the next cheap picture, because I was allowed to get away with murder.
People like Spencer Tracy held up because they had the background originally, but to this day they never have changed Mr. Gable's role, or most of them.
A nice, steady job I don't need that bad. I'm not that satisfied with it.