Dressing Up Quotes by Ellie Goulding, Theophilus London, Felicity Jones, Fern Mallis, Blake Lively, Amy Poehler and many others.

I’d hate it to become style over substance, I’d hate people to start putting me in a magazine article about my style. I don’t like dressing up in something I’m not necessarily comfortable in just to make it more of a show. I want the power to come from what I sing about and how I sing.
Dressing up, for me, is looking like an idiot.
As a child, I always liked dressing up and getting into character, and actors are lucky in being able to retain that playfulness, though we do seem to find it hard to grow up.
For many young girls, [Barbie is] their first association with fashion and dressing up and changing clothes.
Dressing up is all about reflecting how I feel.
I hate Halloween. I hate dressing up. I hate – I wear wigs, makeup, costumes every day. Halloween is like, my least favorite holiday.
A new survey says one in three adults will be dressing up for Halloween. As for me, I’m not going to do anything. I’m going as Congress.
Acting is a really simple job – it’s just hard to do. You just have to be that person with their background in that situation. That’s all it is. My kids do it all the time when they’re dressing up and playing games.
Like at Halloween: I knew I’d arrived when I saw people dressing up on Halloween as my character.
Of all the things I do, acting is the thing that grabs most, but there’s another level on which it strikes me as being a little silly. In the end you’re dressing up and deciding to be somebody.
I feel that a lot of British comedy is often too bombastic, too obvious, dressing up and shouting and pulling funny faces.
I love dressing up for events; to me it’s almost like wearing a costume for the evening.
The work my mum does, a lot of it is re-housing homeless people, that’s a real job. I play make-believe and dressing up for a living!
I do not think I reinvent myself. Wearing my hair differently or changing my style of dress is playing dress-up. I don’t take it too seriously.
Helping others pulls us out of our own problems. And so does dressing up like frogs and playing leap frog in a Starbucks. Who would’ve known.
I am the guy dressing up in, you know, the caveman outfit for the kids birthday parties.
My first paid job was delivering newspapers. The first paid acting job I got was dressing up as Edam cheese and handing out leaflets on London’s Oxford Street. I got pushed over by these little herberts and given a good shoe-in.
I love dressing up in superhero outfits and in fact, when I dress up as Wonder Woman, I actually think that I’m more powerful.
I feel totally female. I didn’t compete with men and I don’t want to look like a man! I love being a lady and dressing up and masquerading and wearing all the fineries. I’m breaking down the idea that the artist has to look poor, with berets.
That’s one of the fun things…That’s your excuse for dressing up. You can get picked on and go, ‘Oh well I’m in a band’.
I just love dressing up in everything a man is supposed not to be, in all that vulnerability, sweetness, preciousness and impracticality.
The first movie I literally ever made in my life was about two guys playing Stratego with each other. I had all my friends dressing up like the military characters in the game. So ‘Battleship’ is really my second board game turned movie!
I’m tired of the industry, tired of playing the whole game – the dressing up, the red carpet. I hate talking about myself.
I love to see what they [Michelle Obama and Kate Middleton] wear but I am not interested. It’s not natural. If you are a girl dressing up in the morning thinking about the whole world having a point of view on what you are wearing, it takes the pleasure out of getting dressed.
I’m interested in the self. And in the limits and transformations of self. And in self presentation. And in doubt. And in playing with the audience’s expectations. But I don’t like dressing up like on Halloween.
I don’t really consider myself to be a comedian. I mean, it’s not like I’m sitting around writing jokes or anything. I just like dressing up and pretending to be other people.
As far back as I can ever remember, without really knowing it I wanted to be an actor. I was always dressing up, you know, playing pretend, putting on mothers hats and things. I’m sure Freud would have something to say about that. It was very much in my blood.
If I hadn’t been a woman, I’d be a drag queen for sure. I like all that flair and I’d be dressing up in them high heels and putting on the big hair. I’d be like Ru Paul.
When I was in school, I was always writing scripts and dressing up as characters. I’d constantly be that guy who’d get up on stage. I used to write imaginary TV shows, like soap operas, for fun.
I think every young girl at some point in her early life wonders what it’s like to be a princess. They like the idea of dressing up and the fun of it.
You look green, immature. A young boy playing at business, dressing up in the manner in which he believes an actual grown-up would. Your viewpoint of business attire is one of wide-eyed wonder from the nursery door.
I think that if you have to work very hard at dressing up and it makes you nervous or uptight, then you won’t look very well because you won’t be comfortable. I think it’s much better to be comfortable and happy than well dressed, don’t you?
I am a kid in the dressing-up box at heart.
I’ve always loved the pomp and circumstance of dressing up; the pagenatry and all of the glamour of Hollywood.
The diplomatic thing for me to say is that if publishers are dressing up other authors as Terry Pratchett clones then they are doing a disservice to those authors. If they didn’t dress them as clones but did something different, then those authors could be pioneering in a different sense.
I certainly got the jokes within the joke, dressing up in a wet suit, sitting in a Twingo, scaling a rubber mountain, dressing up and stealing a diamond, of course. If not now, when?
I really believe that fashion, and dressing up, is a great way for guys to express and interact with their creativity.
I love Halloween and dressing up. I usually have at least three costumes.
I really enjoy dressing up. I’m pretty much a girlie girl.
No one else on the team in college was dressing up. They were wearing sweats.
I love glamorous women. Hugh adores glamour, as well. Im completely behind women dressing up and looking as good as they can.
To me, being grown-up meant smoking cigarettes, drinking cocktails, and dressing up in high heels and glamourous outfits.
By far the best dressing up outfit I ever had was a wonderful pair of clown dungarees, which my Granny made.
Making films is great. You’ve got 100 people around and you’re all dressing up and making weird art – it’s a fun group activity.
Dressing up is a bore. At a certain age, you decorate yourself to attract the opposite sex, and at a certain age, I did that. But I’m past that age.
I think dressing up or down should be a creative experience. Exciting. Fun. For me the key to personal style lies in accessories. I love objects from different worlds, different eras, combined my way. Never uptight, achieving – hopefully – a kind of throwaway chic
When you’re growing up, you play dress-up – it’s a game, it’s a pastime. And then as you get older, getting ready and looking nice becomes this constant stress. I want to make it fun again.
I like costumes. I am always dressing up – I’m very English like that.
Red carpets and dressing up are a part of work that I enjoy less than some people.
My fancy dress costume of choice is… something 1920s or 30s, when there was still so much elegance and attention to detail. An excuse for ultimate dressing-up indulgence.
I love fast cars, loud guns and classic rock ‘n’ roll, but I’d never do any of it in
flats. I love me a nice, big uncomfortable pair of heels and some big hair! Maybe
it’s a Southern thing, but I love dressing up. It’s everything I can do not to leave
the house in a goddamn prom dress every day.
flats. I love me a nice, big uncomfortable pair of heels and some big hair! Maybe
it’s a Southern thing, but I love dressing up. It’s everything I can do not to leave
the house in a goddamn prom dress every day.
Men who are not given any voice in this because of the secret nature of the courts, what they’re left with is dressing up ridiculously, but at least using humour to try and draw attention to their kids
I finally learned to love myself by dressing up as Geri Halliwell.
The thing is, dressing up, going to church, dropping a twenty in the offering plate, those things are all well and good, but that doesn’t make you a Christian.
Well you are fresh Your face is fabulous Don’t forget you’re one of a kind When nobody’s checking the deeds you’ve done And nobody’s hearing your cries You make all the fashion statements Just by dressing up your mind ((Beauty in Ugly))
I like dressing up for dates and dissecting a dinner conversation with a new guy to determine if he might be The One.
Classified ads of the Ku Klux Klan: Tired of all the games? Do you like racial purity, horses and dressing up like a ghost?
Style is a way to say who you are without having to speak.
The bible says it’s by grace that you’re saved it’s not by dressing up that you’re saved. So I just wanted people to know it’s not about putting on airs, it’s about being honest and transparent and saying “God here’s my junk, can you help me?”
Dressing up is like therapy; I feel better in myself when I’ve made an effort.
You make all the fashion statements just by dressing up your mind.
I hate parties. I really don’t like public events. I hate dressing up. I am the worst celebrity ever!