"I never really address myself to any image anybody has of me. That's like fighting with ghosts"
About this Quote
Field’s line is a quiet refusal to live inside other people’s projections, and it lands because it’s both practical and a little haunted. “Any image anybody has of me” nods to the peculiar tax of celebrity: you’re not just a person, you’re a collage assembled from roles, interviews, tabloid angles, and whatever mood the audience brought with them. Trying to “address” that image would mean accepting its authority, treating strangers’ assumptions as if they were a real conversation you’re obligated to join.
The kicker is the metaphor. “Fighting with ghosts” reframes public perception as something intangible, shifting, and unwinnable. A ghost can’t be pinned down; it can’t be corrected in any lasting way. You swat at it, you exhaust yourself, and it still drifts back through the wall. Field’s intent reads as boundary-setting, but also self-preservation: the only way to keep working, aging, and evolving in public is to stop litigating your own narrative every time it’s misread.
There’s subtext here about gender and longevity in Hollywood. For actresses especially, the “image” often comes preloaded with expectations: likability, gratitude, eternal youth, a fixed persona. Field rejects the performance of reassurance. She’s not saying she’s above criticism; she’s saying the criticism isn’t always addressed to her actual self. It’s addressed to a phantom someone invented, and you don’t build a life by arguing with phantoms.
The kicker is the metaphor. “Fighting with ghosts” reframes public perception as something intangible, shifting, and unwinnable. A ghost can’t be pinned down; it can’t be corrected in any lasting way. You swat at it, you exhaust yourself, and it still drifts back through the wall. Field’s intent reads as boundary-setting, but also self-preservation: the only way to keep working, aging, and evolving in public is to stop litigating your own narrative every time it’s misread.
There’s subtext here about gender and longevity in Hollywood. For actresses especially, the “image” often comes preloaded with expectations: likability, gratitude, eternal youth, a fixed persona. Field rejects the performance of reassurance. She’s not saying she’s above criticism; she’s saying the criticism isn’t always addressed to her actual self. It’s addressed to a phantom someone invented, and you don’t build a life by arguing with phantoms.
Quote Details
| Topic | Confidence |
|---|
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