"I cry every chance I get"
About this Quote
"I cry every chance I get" lands like a small act of rebellion dressed up as a confession. Coming from Richard Gere - a matinee-idol-era actor whose career was built inside a Hollywood masculinity that prized cool control - the line reads less as vulnerability-for-vulnerability's-sake and more as a deliberate refusal to stay armored. The wording matters: not "when I'm sad", not "sometimes", but "every chance". Crying becomes an opportunistic practice, almost a muscle you train, not a breakdown you apologize for.
There is subtexted craft here, too. Actors traffic in sanctioned emotion: tears on cue are treated as professionalism, not weakness. Gere's phrasing collapses the boundary between performance and person, suggesting that the emotional access he needs for the work has bled into a philosophy of living. It also quietly mocks the cultural script that allows men to be tender only under certain conditions - a funeral, a big win, a private moment carefully framed as exceptional. He flips the logic: the exceptional thing is not crying, it's the chance to do it.
Contextually, the quote fits a late-career Gere - public, reflective, associated with humanitarian causes and spiritual curiosity - signaling an evolution from romantic lead to someone using his platform to normalize emotional transparency. It's not melodrama. It's permission, delivered in eight plain words.
There is subtexted craft here, too. Actors traffic in sanctioned emotion: tears on cue are treated as professionalism, not weakness. Gere's phrasing collapses the boundary between performance and person, suggesting that the emotional access he needs for the work has bled into a philosophy of living. It also quietly mocks the cultural script that allows men to be tender only under certain conditions - a funeral, a big win, a private moment carefully framed as exceptional. He flips the logic: the exceptional thing is not crying, it's the chance to do it.
Contextually, the quote fits a late-career Gere - public, reflective, associated with humanitarian causes and spiritual curiosity - signaling an evolution from romantic lead to someone using his platform to normalize emotional transparency. It's not melodrama. It's permission, delivered in eight plain words.
Quote Details
| Topic | Sadness |
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