Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
Theater to me is acting but it's more real on film.
Everything I have in life comes from Knots Landing.
I have no interest in writing, directing or producing.
Knots Landing is the best thing that ever happened to me.
In January '77 I went out to LA and have been here 26 years.
And I had a lot to play, which is what you want as an actor.
My wife is Danish and we go to Denmark a couple of times a year.
It was unpredictable, good storytelling that brought you back each week.
The decision as to why a show makes it has to do with politics and money.
If I could work with Joan Van Ark every day for the rest of my life I would.
But no, I'm still living in LA and haven't dropped off the face of the earth.
I act for the reality, for the moment, and most of all I do it for the process.
Thirty years ago dinner theatre used to be much more of a going concern than it is now.
One of the things I was so glad that happened to me on Knots was that I learned to relax.
I have German Shepherds that I train and have brought back to Germany. I love going there.
I really wasn't on the Dallas set much. I did three or four episodes so I didn't see too much.
The thing with being on a series that runs that long is that the writers run out of things to do.
Television is so dictated by time constraints that you have to make quick decisions and go with them.
On daytime they continue to revisit a lot of the same stuff while nighttime does move on and show development.
The reason that people say one line at junkets is that they've heard the same question 37 times. You get bored out of your mind.
I remember the actor Dale Robertson said he quit acting when he got tired of having to hold his stomach in. I feel that way sometimes.
I was in a Paris for four or five days and I couldn't believe the reaction I got there. It was just bizarre; people recognizing me left and right.
I went to the Westminster College for Men in Missouri, which is what it was called back then, and transferred to the University of Denver where I ultimately got my degree.
I can't really recall the first time I was noticed by a producer but the first time I was on television was doing Daytime for Another World, which I started in December '75 and went until December '76.
What happens if you're the guy who's been on the show ten years and is highly paid but they have nothing for you to do is that they bring in other people, and you become a supporting character to those people.