The pure connecting factor is that those of us who describe ourselves as feminists want equal rights for all people.
BETTY BUCKLEYThe pure connecting factor is that those of us who describe ourselves as feminists want equal rights for all people.
More Betty Buckley Quotes
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Usually, I fly in the day before a concert so your voice can acclimate to the new environment.
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There’s a lot of maintenance that goes into being a professional singer.
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Musical Theater is now a more expanded art form. Back then, singer/actors were not the norm. From the 60’s to now, it is necessary to do it all to be a consummate Broadway performer.
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I was hugely relieved to discover there was a purpose for girls with loud voices.
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My two great loves are music and horses.
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Broadway has changed tremendously from the early days when the shows were referred to as musical comedies.
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It’s just a little ranch. Thirty-five acres. In Texas, if it’s not a thousand acres, it’s considered a ranchette.
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As you get older, your voice changes, as well. Your voice should be able to last as long as you last.
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I love Mary Chapin Carpenter songs. I love her songs ‘Come On, Come On’ and ‘I Am A Town’, they’re two of my favorite songs.
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The work that must be done for each woman to reconnect with her psyche and to give herself a chance to live her own life is essentially the same. The realization of the equality of all races, the equality of all beings is essential.
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Good performance is about the capacity to focus and concentrate.
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If we’re for one another, we’re feminists. The rest is semantics.
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For one thing, I teach my students what my teacher for twenty years, Paul Gavert, told me, ‘The voice follows… the voice follows everything about you… who you are.
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I have never experienced racism in the feminist movement, so it concerned me to think that I was unable to see the subject clearly because I came from white, middle-class privilege.
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I had no words for these feelings. And then people started using the word Ms. Suddenly, there was this handle with which I could identify myself and understand why I felt so out of whack with the culture around me.
BETTY BUCKLEY