"I love music and I love to dance"
About this Quote
A lot hides inside a line this simple: pleasure as a philosophy, and performance as a kind of truth. Coming from Jami Gertz, an actress whose career spans teen-cult visibility in the 1980s and a later pivot into quieter longevity (and high-profile philanthropy and sports ownership), "I love music and I love to dance" reads less like a quirky aside than a small manifesto about staying human in an industry built to turn people into products.
The specificity matters. She doesn’t say she loves acting, or fame, or even art in the abstract. She names two embodied joys: music (something you take in) and dance (something you do). That pairing creates a neat subtext: life is at its best when you’re both receptive and expressive, when you let something move you and then you move back. It also quietly rejects the Hollywood posture of cool. Loving to dance is an uncool admission; it implies abandon, sweat, a willingness to look a little foolish. In celebrity culture, that’s intimacy.
Contextually, it’s a line that plays well in interviews because it’s disarming. Actors are trained to sell interiority; this sells presence. It signals approachability and a baseline optimism without insisting on profundity. The intent is likely straightforward, but the cultural work it does is subtler: it frames joy as a discipline, not a guilty pleasure, and it positions the speaker as someone who chooses rhythm and release over cynicism. In 2026, that reads like a strategy for survival.
The specificity matters. She doesn’t say she loves acting, or fame, or even art in the abstract. She names two embodied joys: music (something you take in) and dance (something you do). That pairing creates a neat subtext: life is at its best when you’re both receptive and expressive, when you let something move you and then you move back. It also quietly rejects the Hollywood posture of cool. Loving to dance is an uncool admission; it implies abandon, sweat, a willingness to look a little foolish. In celebrity culture, that’s intimacy.
Contextually, it’s a line that plays well in interviews because it’s disarming. Actors are trained to sell interiority; this sells presence. It signals approachability and a baseline optimism without insisting on profundity. The intent is likely straightforward, but the cultural work it does is subtler: it frames joy as a discipline, not a guilty pleasure, and it positions the speaker as someone who chooses rhythm and release over cynicism. In 2026, that reads like a strategy for survival.
Quote Details
| Topic | Music |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Gertz, Jami. (2026, January 15). I love music and I love to dance. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-love-music-and-i-love-to-dance-143007/
Chicago Style
Gertz, Jami. "I love music and I love to dance." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-love-music-and-i-love-to-dance-143007/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I love music and I love to dance." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-love-music-and-i-love-to-dance-143007/. Accessed 7 Feb. 2026.
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