"I have never given up on men easily"
About this Quote
The line reads like a wry, tender manifesto from an actress long scrutinized for her beauty and independence. Jacqueline Bisset built a career across decades in films like Bullitt, Day for Night, and The Deep while often being asked about her love life and her choice not to marry. She has acknowledged deep, long-term relationships, notably with actor Michael Sarrazin, and has spoken of valuing her autonomy. Saying she has never given up on men easily pushes back against the caricature of the aloof star who drifts from romance to romance. It suggests loyalty, patience, and a willingness to do the unglamorous work of understanding another person.
The phrasing matters. Not giving up easily does not mean never walking away. It implies discernment and limits; she stays when the bond is real and effort makes sense, but she will not bind herself to convention for its own sake. That stance fits a woman who resisted the pressure to convert companionship into marriage simply to appease expectations. It reframes steadfastness as a personal ethic rather than a social obligation.
There is also an undercurrent of humor and experience. The line acknowledges that men can be complicated, that relationships can fray under career demands, ego, aging, and the distortions of celebrity. Endurance here is not martyrdom; it is empathy. Bisset’s public image combines poise with a European cool, yet the sentiment reveals a romantic who keeps trying, who prefers to repair rather than replace.
In a culture that often treats love as consumable and women’s desirability as time-bound, her stance reads as both romantic and defiant. She claims the right to keep faith with partners on her terms and the right to remain unmarried without being accused of cynicism. Perseverance becomes a measure of depth, not dependency, and independence becomes a choice made out of clarity, not resignation.
The phrasing matters. Not giving up easily does not mean never walking away. It implies discernment and limits; she stays when the bond is real and effort makes sense, but she will not bind herself to convention for its own sake. That stance fits a woman who resisted the pressure to convert companionship into marriage simply to appease expectations. It reframes steadfastness as a personal ethic rather than a social obligation.
There is also an undercurrent of humor and experience. The line acknowledges that men can be complicated, that relationships can fray under career demands, ego, aging, and the distortions of celebrity. Endurance here is not martyrdom; it is empathy. Bisset’s public image combines poise with a European cool, yet the sentiment reveals a romantic who keeps trying, who prefers to repair rather than replace.
In a culture that often treats love as consumable and women’s desirability as time-bound, her stance reads as both romantic and defiant. She claims the right to keep faith with partners on her terms and the right to remain unmarried without being accused of cynicism. Perseverance becomes a measure of depth, not dependency, and independence becomes a choice made out of clarity, not resignation.
Quote Details
| Topic | Romantic |
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