"Don't be afraid to go out on a limb. It's where all the fruit is"
About this Quote
MacLaine’s line sells risk the way Hollywood sells reinvention: not as noble suffering, but as the only place the good stuff actually grows. “Don’t be afraid” frames fear as the default state, not a personal failing, and then flips the usual safety calculus. A limb is precarious, exposed, and slightly ridiculous-looking. That’s the point. It’s a visual gag with a dare tucked inside it: the safest posture is also the least nourishing.
The subtext is showbiz pragmatism dressed up as folksy wisdom. In an industry where you’re constantly auditioning, aging in public, and being evaluated by strangers, “the trunk” is the role you’ve already played, the persona people already understand. The limb is the weird choice: the project that might flop, the public stance that might cost you, the reinvention that invites mockery before it earns respect. Fruit is reward, but it’s also evidence. You can’t claim you’re growing if you never reach for anything that wasn’t already within arm’s length.
Coming from MacLaine, the line carries extra charge. Her career is defined by taking tonal left turns and refusing to stay “contained” as a star: romantic comedies, sharp-edged dramas, stage work, and an unapologetically eccentric public spirituality that made her both a punchline and a pioneer. The quote doesn’t ask you to be fearless in the abstract; it argues that exposure is where value accumulates. If you want sweetness, you have to tolerate the sway.
The subtext is showbiz pragmatism dressed up as folksy wisdom. In an industry where you’re constantly auditioning, aging in public, and being evaluated by strangers, “the trunk” is the role you’ve already played, the persona people already understand. The limb is the weird choice: the project that might flop, the public stance that might cost you, the reinvention that invites mockery before it earns respect. Fruit is reward, but it’s also evidence. You can’t claim you’re growing if you never reach for anything that wasn’t already within arm’s length.
Coming from MacLaine, the line carries extra charge. Her career is defined by taking tonal left turns and refusing to stay “contained” as a star: romantic comedies, sharp-edged dramas, stage work, and an unapologetically eccentric public spirituality that made her both a punchline and a pioneer. The quote doesn’t ask you to be fearless in the abstract; it argues that exposure is where value accumulates. If you want sweetness, you have to tolerate the sway.
Quote Details
| Topic | Motivational |
|---|---|
| Source | Attributed to Shirley MacLaine; listed on Wikiquote (Shirley MacLaine). |
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