Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I'm a pure spirit, ha ha ha!
I was playing good tennis up until 100.
Peter Weir is remarkable. He can do anything.
I move slowly, and I used to move fast. I miss that.
As far as 'St. Elsewhere' goes, I just loved that show.
Connie Bennett, the guys used to stake her, she was so good.
With Hitchcock, you work with a script, and you stick to it.
Some of the movies I did - well, you have to feed your family.
Karl Malden! A dear, dear, dear friend. I loved Karl. He was great.
I eat meat, poultry and fish in proper proportion - nothing to excess.
There's a conflict between what's in your mind and what's in your body.
I used to watch Babe Ruth for 50 cents. Now, baseball tickets are $400!
I'm very fond of Amy Schumer. I think she's terrific, an enormous talent.
Actors are, in a sense, like athletes. They've got to stretch once in a while.
I always felt it was necessary to keep up some kind of communication with other people.
I have never had a better working experience than 'St. Elsewhere.' It's a supreme show.
If I go to England, they know I'm not an Englishman, but most Americans think I'm English.
You must be active; you must be positive, even if things don't go the way you want them to.
I don't eat shellfish. I drink wine moderately and have one whiskey every evening before dinner.
I think if you allow yourself to mope and feel sorry for yourself, it can take years off your life.
An actor can grow stale in a bad part. Actors grow stale, generally, because there's no demand on them.
I watch the Dodgers every night - no reading anymore - and I dream that I could have hit that home run.
Renoir had a strong feeling about his fellow soldiers. He'd never disrespect them by putting the war down.
I'm very proud of the people with whom I've worked. It's an amazing collection that just by happenstance happened.
We in New York were very poor in the depths of the Depression - but I must say, that was the best time of my life.
I loved 'Modern Family!' It was sort of the precursor to 'Trainwreck,' to that character. But I loved it. I had a great time doing it.
You know I've never worked without a script before, but with Apatow, it's all improvisation. He calls out a premise, and you have to adapt.
If you're in the groove, you get something back from the audience that is so exciting and rewarding that no film or television work can possibly compete.
I was clearly brought into the whole thing about acting by my mother. She loved the theater. She had a very pleasant singing voice, which she used to sing for her ladies' club.
I very much admired Lancaster. George Clooney reminds me of him today. Not all the macho, swinging around that Burt used to do, but the courage. You know where you stand with men like that.
The writing was vastly superior to almost anything that was on the air. It's one of the great shows. It was an important show... 'St. Elsewhere' was one of the great shows in the history of television.
I loved working with Renoir on 'The Southerner.' Oh, I loved it! I particularly loved when he had a scene with a cow going through a garden, and he wanted a little dog to come and bark at it and chase it out.
You were taught how to do the things you needed to do. Dance, speech, fencing. They groomed people. If you were in a film, and the script wasn't working for you, they brought in screenwriters and fixed the scripts.
There were little Charlie Chaplins that you would wind up, and they would walk. I remember vividly. I was sitting in the high chair with the little tray in front of me. My parents would wind it up, and it would walk to me.
I was in my second year at NYU. I knew what I wanted to do, and I just walked out of college. So, from the age of 17, I've been able to do what I wanted, and that makes for a kind of contentment, a fairly pleasant demeanor.
I imagine I was supposed to become a lawyer or something. But this was the Depression; the lawyers I saw were all driving cabs. So I thought, 'Well, if I'm going to be badly off anyway, I might as well be badly off in the theater, where you get used to it.'
My family were Conservative Jews. My parents were both born in this country, but my father grew up on the Lower East Side, and my mother was born and raised in Harlem when there was a large Jewish 'colony' there. Eventually, they moved to Jersey City to get away from New York.
The Jews are an artistic people. It's clear from the music, the actors, the writers. They are just artists. In the early part of the 20th century, when they first came over, they had no money, but they still went to theater. The theater and education were the two biggest things in their lives.
The Depression was remarkable because you had nothing, and the salaries, when you got a job, were very small. But you could do anything. You see, a donut was ten cents. A cup of coffee was a nickel. That was lunch, with an apple. And I would be playing a lead on a Broadway show on that kind of diet.
I knew a lot of people who were beaten by the Depression, but there was still a feeling of positiveness among people: everyone thought it's got to get better. We were all trying to get the country back on its feet. There was a feeling that you could do anything, and this was certainly very true in the theater.
I think Obama is going to go down as one of our greatest presidents because what this guy has done and has tried to do, and over the kind of opposition that I don't know if Lincoln had, except he had to go to war. This speaks so brilliantly of Obama and the way he conducts himself. I think he is already one of our greatest presidents.
Truly great performers reveal not only their characters but bring everything they know about the world with them. It's not just what's in the script but the story of everything you've done and of who you are. If you're Chaplin, you're the immigrant. No matter what he's doing, he's always the little guy trying to make his place in the world.