My mother couldn't have been happier when I said I was moving to New York.
Both my mother and father were very supportive of any career move any of us wanted to make.
The English was really my mother, it was never me. Being the daughter of my father, I always felt very French.
My first husband, yes, I eloped with him from Hungary against my mother's wishes.
Of all the roles I've played, none has been as fulfilling as being a mother.
A mother takes twenty years to make a man of her boy, and another woman makes a fool of him in twenty minutes.
You don't have to deserve your mother's love. You have to deserve your father's.
The father is always a Republican toward his son, and his mother's always a Democrat.
Mother's love is peace. It need not be acquired, it need not be deserved.
The mother-child relationship is paradoxical and, in a sense, tragic. It requires the most intense love on the mother's side, yet this very love must help the child grow away from the mother, and to become fully independent.
Being a mother gives you an incredible feeling of empowerment, you think if I can go through such pain and that level of sleep and still operate and not be grumpy you can do anything. It can be quite scary, you can't function your brain, forget your vocabulary.
Well ironically my last three roles have all been a mother. One was a Canadian film where the baby was taken away because she is a drug addict, in Irish Jam I play a mother to a four year old. I think in the future I'll be able to handle the role with a lot more depth.
The older I get the more of my mother I see in myself.
Blaming mother is just a negative way of clinging to her still.
The debt of gratitude we owe our mother and father goes forward, not backward. What we owe our parents is the bill presented to us by our children.