Sydney Pollack - biography
Biography
Sydney Pollack is best-known for the following films:
Sydney Pollack Quotes
“Burt Lancaster was largely responsible for me becoming a director.”“I didn’t believe that I’d ever be lucky enough to be able to make a living as an actor.”
“The danger in talking about Meryl Streep is she tends to sound boring - she’s so perfect.”
“And I taught acting for years, and without knowing it that was the real thing that started bending me toward directing.”
“No, I never went to college. Always regretted it, always envied people who did.”
“I mean, the truth of the matter is, I like the failures as much as I like the successes, it’s only the world that doesn’t like the failures.”
“But, I’ve made films in Japan, in Yugoslavia, all over Europe, all over the United States, Mexico, but not Hollywood.”
“Film is a collective experience, as you know.”
“I didn’t grow up thinking of movies as film, or art, but as movies, something to do on a Saturday afternoon.”
“I mean, movies are like your kids or your fingers and toes or something, it’s pretty hard to pick favorites.”
“I personally have never made a movie in Hollywood, because I don’t want to get up in my own bed and then go to the movie set, and then come home at night to my real life.”
“I’ve produced my own films for twenty years now - it means I have to talk to less people.”
“The very reasons sometimes that you make a film are the reasons for its failure.”
“Well, I was born and raised in the Midwest, in Indiana specifically, and my childhood was full of weekend movies, you know, the Saturday and Sunday popcorn movies.”
“Well, the wonderful thing about making movies, oddly enough, is that they’re sort of highly motivated graduate studies in one or another field.”
“Well, there’s no question that a good script is an absolutely essential, maybe the essential thing for a movie.”
“When you make a film you usually make a film about an idea.”
“With a movie you’re creating from the beginning this particular work, let’s not call it work of art, because very few movies are works of art, let’s just call them bits of popular culture, whatever they are, sometimes very rarely by accident a movie becomes a work of art.”
“You are not an active creator of the film.”
“By that I mean, I think that it is true that politics and political heroes have to satisfy our need to be greater than mortal in some way, and that’s led them into creating illusions, sound bites, focus groups that tell you what to do.”
“I think it’s a terrible shame that politics has become show business.”
“Every single art form is involved in film, in a way.”
“For example, a man who might not have enormous charisma, who could be president 40 years ago, and who was a deserving president, I don’t know that George Washington would be a president today, I don’t know that Abe Lincoln would, I don’t know that Roosevelt would.”
“I don’t know about liberal bias, but people of a liberal mentality are probably attracted in greater numbers to the arts than people of a conservative mentality.”
“I mean, I don’t know anything else that I would try to do, but it’s a very frustrating thing to do, because you are trying to take what’s a fantasy in your head and make it live through the minds of 200 people.”
“I mean, certainly it’s the single biggest event, I think, in terms of popular entertainment, or art even, if you say that, of the 20th Century. It’s been film. It’s the 20th Century’s real art form.”
“Reading a novel of a private experience, very, very different, the nature of it is very different.”
“We talked about Tootsie, the idea in Tootsie is that a man becomes a better man for having been a woman.”
“You don’t normally do another presentation of All About Eve. You do one All About Eve, and that’s it.”
“You know, essentially when you do a play you’re reinterpreting a work of art that already exists. That’s not what happens with a movie.”
Filmography
The Film Director
Sydney Pollack directed the following films:The Slender Thread (1965)
This Property Is Condemned (1966)
The Scalphunters (1968)
The Swimmer (1968)
Castle Keep (1969)
They Shoot Horses, Don’t They? (1969)
Jeremiah Johnson (1972)
The Way We Were (1973)
The Yakuza (1974)
Three Days of the Condor (1975)
Bobby Deerfield (1977)
The Electric Horseman (1979)
Absence of Malice (1981)
Tootsie (1982)
Out of Africa (1985)
Havana (1990)
The Firm (1993)
Sabrina (1995)
Random Hearts (1999)
The Interpreter (2005)
The Writer
Sydney Pollack contributed to the screenplay for the following films:The Scalphunters (1968)
The Way We Were (1973)
Absence of Malice (1981)
The Actor
Sydney Pollack has appeared in the following films:The Player (1992)
Changing Lanes (2002)
Made of Honor (2008)



