Henry Fonda one time said that every time he had a job, he thought it was gonna' be the last one. And, if you got any sense, you gotta' think that because, you know when somebody's gonna do a dip, some of 'em go pretty far down.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I must have had faith that day. When I went out, I was Henry Fonda again. An unemployed actor but a man.
People all over are finding themselves in jobs they never thought they'd be in.
It's so funny because all those years I was working, I basically always felt that whatever job I was doing would probably be the last one I would get. I really never thought that I stacked up with the other girls.
It's always possible as an actress that your last job could really be your last job.
I think, you know, when you're an actor who's had periods of unemployment, it makes you feel really good to have a job - to say that you're expected somewhere, do you know what I mean?
Obviously, the closer you get to that moment, the more you start to realize 'this is the last year of my contract.'
All my life, since I was 16, I've been wondering where that next job was gonna come from.
Even though David Pottruck has gone to this unbelievable career where he is a billionaire, there is always a new hurdle. He never sits there saying, 'I'm the best.'
As an actor, you always think that whatever job you have is going to be your last. In some way, shape or form, you think you're going to screw it up and you're never going to work again.
I never had the sense that there was an end: that there was a retirement or that there was a jackpot.