Ethel Waters was an American singer and actress known for her powerful voice and influential contributions to jazz and blues music. She achieved fame with hits like "Stormy Weather" and appeared in films such as "Cabin in the Sky." Waters' career also included significant stage performances, and her work helped bridge the gap between jazz, blues, and mainstream music.

"The big compliment came from the beer drinkers who didn't know me. They wouldn't drink or move when I sang. If they had their glasses in mid-air, the glasses wouldn't come down."



"The white audiences thought I was white, my features being what they are, and at every performance I'd have to take off my gloves to prove I was a spade."



"I cannot help feeling I would have been happier with a husband and chidren of my own."



"New York is only 97 miles from Philadelphia but was the Big Time as no other American city has ever been."



"Somehow, the things my mother wanted to do, the release in evangelism she sought with such frenzy, were transferred to me."



"Elia Kazan understood my problems. He was able to bring out the very best in me. He gave me credit for my intelligence."



"It has been an ache and a joy both to look over this big shoulder of mine at all my yesterdays."



"I never accepted the idea that I was all through. I guess no person who has once been a star can do that, ever."



"I've never been able to feel that there is anything undignified about making your living by the sweat of your brow."



"I want affection and tenderness desperately, but there's something in me that prevents me from handing it out."



"You are a person of the greatest importance when you are a mother of a family. Just do your job right and your kids will love you."



"My whole family could sing. My family harmonized without any instruments to accompany them."



"Whenever I played Columbus, Ohio, I dropped in to see my close friend, a medium who had mysterious powers. Her Indian guide was Mohawk."



"Basically there is no difference between whites and blacks, browns and yellows. I decided to think no more of people as Northerners and Southerners."



"I wanted to be with the kind of people I'd grown up with, but you can't go back to them and be one of them again, no matter how hard you try."

