Words matter. These are the best Rumer Willis Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I have an inner drag queen. Or rather, I feel like I was a drag queen in a past life.
Everyone has opportunities and different doors that are opened to them in different ways. In the end, if you’re talented you’ll get work, if you’re not, you won’t, so it doesn’t really matter who you know.
If I could find the perfect career of doing television and movies where I could sing, that would be great.
When I was growing up, I had a nanny who would always play ‘The Sound of Music’ and ‘Bye Bye Birdie,’ so I was always listening to that stuff.
I have been very, very blessed with not having stage parents.
As you get older, you realise your parents aren’t these superheroes. They’re actually people.
Fear is such a huge thing that holds us back.
I just found such a love for dancing. If anybody would love to just feel great, not just physically, but you want to feel such confidence, just go and take a ballroom dancing class! I love it more than any kind of workout.
Stay true to your integrity, and if you’re doing something that you feel like doesn’t represent your integrity, speak up. You have to say that. If you’re doing something that doesn’t make you feel good, you probably shouldn’t be doing it.
I’ve never wanted to just ride on coat tails. I don’t know, if you don’t earn something then it doesn’t feel as good.
Love is the only unifier in the world. We’ve all felt exactly the same way. It’ll make you crazy, and it’ll make you ecstatic, and that’s true for everyone.
I’m all for the equality.
I thought I’d lost a pair of earrings once. They were, like, $50,000. I was terrified.
Everybody is going to have an opinion on you; not everyone is going to like you. You can’t live your life based on other people’s opinions of you or let that change what you do or how you feel about yourself, because then you’re not living.
My sisters are my best friends and such incredible women.
In high school, I had a much easier time interacting with adults than with my peers.
When I was a teenager, I was super-awkward. I don’t think I really felt comfortable in my body or with how I looked, and people were nasty.
People would say I looked like a man or something called a ‘buttaface’, which means everything good but her face, or ‘potato head’ was the big term that everyone used a lot, basically making fun of the way I looked.
People have such an immediate judgment of me because I have tattoos or because my hair is sometimes crazy.
The only place you can really find the confidence and the love for yourself is within you, so that has to be what carries you: not all of these external things.
I grew up, and I was bullied and very insecure. I hope, if nothing else, if I share enough of my struggle and share what I went through and allow myself to be vulnerable, I’ll let people see who I am.
My parents always knew that I wanted to act, so it didn’t really come as a big surprise. The only thing they told me was that I had to wait until I was 18 so I could get my education out of the way first.