Words matter. These are the best Inbar Lavi Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
My worst job would have to be waiting tables at a restaurant in N.Y. My boss was evil.
There’s so much serenity that comes from economic safety.
A way a woman walks and talks and moves and behaves is completely connected to how she looks.
I used to just go up to strangers and tell them really elaborate stories about who I was and where I was from and try to spice my story, which I didn’t think was very exciting at all. That gave me a sense of life, a sense of excitement – but I don’t do that anymore.
I was a dancer.
I hung onto Hollywood by the skin of my teeth, and at first I fought over every piece of bread. Later, I got very small parts.
I don’t come from a wealthy family, so for me to have to struggle as long as I have in New York and Los Angeles and finally know that I have an income coming in for the next 10 episodes was a major, major life-altering moment.
I’m still far away from the person I want to be, but whoever this is for now, she’s all right.
My dad is Polish. My mom is Moroccan, and I grew up around all kinds of different languages, and I love playing with it, and I love picking up new melodies.
Any time I push through a fear, I’m proud of that.
I love any project where I get to push myself and learn new things.
I take great pride in portraying a strong female character who is independent and can take care of herself. I don’t think we get to see that enough in television.
I always wanted to be an actress, but I was embarrassed to say so, and somehow I found myself in the dance track. I’m very competitive, and I wanted to be the best in that field, too, although it didn’t really speak to me.
Regret is a waste of time and energy and doesn’t do a thing for me.
Anywhere warm would be ideal for me to shoot ‘Imposters!’ Thailand would be fantastic.
My curls were my worst nightmare growing up.
I did lie once to get a job as a bartender. I said I had two years’ experience making drinks, when really, I’d never made a drink in my life.
With ‘Imposters,’ I finally felt I had gotten something I could sink my teeth into. It’s a dream come true, and I couldn’t ask for a more fulfilling and challenging experience. It was something I didn’t expect. A real surprise.
Curly hair is not just a hairstyle: it’s kind of a lifestyle. There is something really free and careless about it and loose and kind of naughty. I love it.
As we see in life, change is hard. Even if you genuinely want it and make the effort, sometimes it’s hard to get it.
I can understand wanting to escape your life and be someone else.
I have a massive head of hair: it’s a Jew ‘fro. It’s living and kicking.
The happiest that I remember myself was putting on plays and pretending to be other people.
It’s never fun when you trust someone and that trust is betrayed.
My mom’s side is very Orthodox, and my dad’s side is the opposite, very liberal. I got a taste of both worlds, and I got to make up my own mind. I’m somewhere in the middle, which is a good place to be.
I think that we all desperately try to fit in to different molds: our parents, our bosses, our partners, social status, friends. We all figure out a look that we think will get us the job or make his parents approve of us or get that girl to want to go on a date, whatever. We all change ourselves to please whoever it is.
We’re all playing a role. You’re playing a role at home, you’re playing a role at work, you’re playing a role to survive.
I’m a bit of a reckless driver.
I was working maybe four different jobs just to make ends meet. I was really broke. I could barely pay rent. I didn’t have a car. I was riding my bike from one job to another and then to audition in between.
Growing up, I felt a little bit invisible.