– Always give them the old fire, even when you feel like a squashed cake of ice.
– Any audience that gets a laugh out of me gets it while I’m facing them.
– As far as dramas are concerned, it’s considered passe for playwrights to turn out anything the average person can understand.
– At a flea market I always head for the junk jewelry table first.
– At one time I smoked, but in 1959 I couldn’t think of anything else to give up for Lent so I stopped – and I haven’t had a cigarette since.
– Broadway has been very good to me. But then, I’ve been very good to Broadway.
– Christmas carols always brought tears to my eyes. I also cry at weddings. I should have cried at a couple of my own.
– Cole Porter had a worldwide reputation as a sophisticate and hedonist.
– Cole Porter wrote Anything Goes and four more hits for me.
– Eisenhower was my war hero and the President I admire and respect most.
– I am known to be able to take care of myself when I become angry. I don’t mince words.
– I attend surprisingly few shows. The type of theater that is popular today just doesn’t appeal to me.
– I can never remember being afraid of an audience. If the audience could do better, they’d be up here on stage and I’d be out there watching them.
– I don’t like to read. The only things I read are gossip columns. If someone gives me a book, it had better have lots of pictures.
– I have plenty of invitations to go places, lots to do. If I’m not working, I go to have my hair taken care of and work at needlepoint.
– I preferred delivering my performance in person. I liked to be in control. You couldn’t be in films.
– I take a breath when I have to.
– I was born in my parents’ bedroom on January 16. The World Almanac says it was 1909. I say it was 1912. But what difference does it make as long as I feel 33?
– I was lucky enough to have the songs in my first show written by George and Ira Gershwin. Then Cole Porter wrote five shows for me.
– I wasn’t straining at the bit to become a movie star any more than I had plotted to get out of vaudeville and into Broadway musicals.
– I work as often as I want and yet I’m free as a bird.
– People who retire fall apart. As long as you’ve still got it, use it.
– I wouldn’t change one thing about my professional life, and I make it a point not to dwell on my mistakes.
– I wouldn’t trust any man as far as you can throw a piano.
– I’ll pat myself on the back and admit I have talent. Beyond that, I just happened to be in the right place at the right time.
– I’ve made a wonderful living playing that theatrical character – the professional brassy dame.
– I’ve never cooked. I can’t do much more in the kitchen than make a cup of tea and some toast.
– I’ve never suffered stage fright. That fascinates people.
– If I feel in need of sleep, I just open a book or turn on the television. Both are better than any sleeping pill.
– In my case, things have pretty much been handed to me.
– Legend has it that when God created me, he gave me a big distinctive voice, a lot of boldness and no heart.
– Mom and Pop were proud of my popularity, but from their point of view, show business was no way to make a living.
– Mom claimed that I could carry a tune at 2 or 3 years of age. Maybe she was a little prejudiced.
– Music, in the past few years… anything singable or understandable is square.
– My beloved Mom and Pop always rated tops with each other, and that’s the way it will always be.
– My career at Warner Brothers consisted of one musical short subject. I was running around in a bear skin. Very chic.
– My father taught me to read music and play the piano-but not well, even though people have said that I’m a natural musician.
– Of my four marriages, the one to Bob Levitt is the only one I don’t regret.
– Once I had all the attention, all I had to do was deliver.
– The slapdash way producers used to assemble a show seems a little unbelievable when we talk about them now.
– There have been people who have tried to take advantage of me. They want to be linked to me just because I’m Ethel Merman.
– There’s such a thing as theater discipline. One player doesn’t appropriate another’s inventions.
– When I’m asked how to succeed in show business, I always say I haven’t the foggiest.
– When you are in deep conflict about something, sometimes the most trivial thing can tip the scales.
– There are lots of show tunes left to do.
– You can’t buck a nun. (Losing the Tony for her Rose to Mary Martin’s Maria von Trapp)
– Call Miss Bird’s Eye 1950, this show is frozen! (being presented new lyrics for Call Me Madam)
You forgot “It’s hotter than a nun’s crotch here!”
Come on, Kevin. Step it up.