Sally Field has always had that rare combination of vulnerability and unwavering strength—a mix that made the world fall in love with her not just once, but repeatedly over seven decades. At 78, she remains as sharp as ever and twice as resilient, with a straightforward honesty that cuts through the usual Hollywood glamour like a serrated knife. Today, she is not only a legendary actress but also a survivor of an era that often required its leading women to be seen but not heard. When she speaks now, it’s with the clarity of someone who has long outgrown the need for approval, as shown in her candid, and often hilariously blunt, reflections on her time as one of Hollywood’s most desired stars.
During a lively appearance on Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen, the conversation turned nostalgic, reminiscing about the leading men she had shared the screen with. A caller brought up a comment Field had made years earlier, where she had named the late James Garner—her co-star in the 1985 classic Murphy’s Romance—as her best on-screen kiss. Garner, known for his effortless masculinity and genuine warmth, seemed to offer a sense of comfort that translated into real chemistry. So, naturally, the follow-up question was bound to come: if Garner was the gold standard, who was at the other end of the spectrum?
Field didn’t hesitate. There were no diplomatic niceties, no “everyone was great” responses, and certainly no softening of the truth. She leaned into the microphone with a mischievous sparkle in her eyes and said, “This is going to shock you.” Then, with a dramatic pause, she dropped the name that defined an entire decade of Hollywood swagger: “Burt Reynolds.”
The reaction was immediate. Even Andy Cohen, who built his career on celebrity candor, seemed momentarily taken aback. Reynolds, after all, was the ultimate sex symbol of the 1970s and 80s—his mustache and charming smirk graced countless bedroom posters. To the public, he was the quintessential alpha male, the swaggering heartthrob of Smokey and the Bandit. But for Field, he was a disaster when it came to kissing. And she wasn’t vague about it. When Cohen asked for more details, wondering if it was a case of a misplaced tongue, Field laughed and offered a far more blunt assessment. “Not totally involved,” she said, adding with a wry smile, “Just a lot of drooling was involved.”
With that one brutally honest word—”drooling”—Field single-handedly dismantled decades of Hollywood mythmaking. It was a moment of raw truth that only someone of her stature could deliver. For many fans, it likely felt like a shift in their cinematic worldview. But for Field, it wasn’t about being mean—it was about being real.
This moment was just the latest chapter in Field’s journey of reclaiming her own story. In her 2018 memoir In Pieces, she peeled back the shiny, tabloid-friendly veneer of her high-profile, five-year relationship with Reynolds. While the public saw a glamorous power couple, Field described a far more suffocating and emotionally taxing reality. Their relationship was a rollercoaster of on-again, off-again turmoil that she eventually realized was stifling her personal growth. Reynolds, she explained, was a man burdened by insecurities and an ego that demanded to be the center of her universe.
“He was just not good for me in any way,” she later told Variety. It wasn’t an attack on his character but an acknowledgment of their deep incompatibility. She spoke of how, in his later years, Reynolds tried to rewrite their history, casting her as the “one who got away” and the great love of his life. But Field saw through this revisionism. To her, he didn’t miss her specifically; he missed the feeling of having something he couldn’t control. She spoke of him with a detached compassion that only comes from decades of therapy, self-reflection, and peace that comes from living life on her own terms.
At 78, Sally Field is now a masterclass in aging with agency. She hasn’t faded into the background or settled for easy grandmotherly roles. Instead, she has sharpened with time. The infectious smile that won hearts in Gidget and The Flying Nun is still there, but now it’s backed by the weight of two Academy Awards and a lifetime of standing her ground. She represents a generation of women who fought to be taken seriously as artists, ultimately forcing the industry to recognize her as the powerhouse who anchored films like Norma Rae, Places in the Heart, and Lincoln.
What endears Field to the public is her refusal to hide her imperfections. Whether talking about her struggles with anxiety, the complexities of her family life, or the challenges of being a woman in a male-dominated industry, she does so with a vulnerability that feels revolutionary. She is the mother who broke our hearts in Steel Magnolias, and the iconic star who famously declared, “You like me, right now, you like me!” during her Oscar acceptance speech—a moment she now views with humor and a deeper understanding of the need for validation that drives so many performers.
What makes her so magnetic today is that she has finally, and comfortably, become “in pieces”—and is putting herself back together on her own terms. She no longer allows the shadows of men like Burt Reynolds to define her worth or her story. She has become the ultimate leading lady of her own life. When she appears on a talk show today, it’s not to promote a product; it’s to share a life well-lived. Her stories aren’t just entertainment; they’re lessons from someone who survived the Hollywood machine.
Sally Field’s journey, from teen star to a 78-year-old truth-teller, proves that the most captivating quality anyone can have is a lack of pretense. She shines not because of Hollywood’s soft-focus lens, but because she’s unburdened by the need to keep other people’s secrets. She glows with the grace that comes from truly knowing who you are, drooling co-stars and all. As she continues to grace our screens and stages, she reminds us that, while Hollywood may be built on illusions, the stars who endure are those who are brave enough to speak the truth.