Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I was by no means a nun.
I'd have made a terrible nun.
I’ve been a nun. A Catholic nun.
Commas, like nuns, often travel in pairs.
The Bagshaws? They didn't know she was a nun!
What news? There's nothing to tell. I'm a nun.
I'll be a nun, raise my daughter, and make albums.
I'm an assassin on the court. And at home, I'm a nun.
... a woman who has been a nun is never anything else.
You're as white as a nun's buttock. Are you all right?
It’s funny to hear priests and nuns argue with each other.
I'd go down in history for being the most revealing nun ever!
Here's to the good Nuns for telling me what books NOT to read!
If nuns begin getting more empowered, where does that leave us?
I would love to play a nun. I used to want to be one when I was a kid.
It's always a good idea to have a nun next to you when you get arrested!
I'm currently in an interesting correspondence with a nun about forgiveness
My manager wants me to dress like a nun and I want to dress like a teenager.
I'm currently in an interesting correspondence with a nun about forgiveness.
In the religion of Love the courtesan is a heretic; but the nun is an atheist.
"Women," he said in disgust. I wasn't sure whether we was referring to me or nuns.
Dog’ is ‘God’ spelled backward; you know that. That’s why you’re here, to help the nuns do God’s work.
Back when I was 8 or 9 and wanted to be a nun, I would often stop at church on my way home from school.
People wanted me to be like the Madonna, the white nun, you know, and that's not me. But I'm no villain.
Without sounding too pretentious, I feel my job is almost like becoming a monk or a nun - it's a calling.
I'd the upbringing a nun would envy. Until I was fifteen I was more familiar with Africa than my own body.
I just knew it would get a big laugh when people saw the 'Flying Nun' throwing the bird to a highway patrolman.
I don't have a life, I really don't. I'm as close to a nun as you can be without the little hat. I'm a golf nun.
As a child I wanted to be a ballerina, ice-cream van owner, wife of George Michael, a nun, and a music conductor.
I don't speak during the day. I warm up physically and, obviously, vocally, constantly. And I try to live like a nun.
There are women who love their husbands as blindly, as enthusiastically, and as enigmatically as nuns their cloister.
I don't think people will ever forget I was an 'Angel', anymore than they'll forget Sally Field was 'The Flying Nun.'
I was a lousy nun. I couldn't do it. I couldn't find God. It wasn't suitable for me. It is suitable for very few people.
I attended speech and drama classes with a nun to help me gain confidence in speaking without my face turning red each time.
I truly believe that God brought this, Dorothy Day script to me, because for a long time up until I was in eight grade - I wanted to be a nun.
I have been called a nun with a switchblade where my privacy is concerned. I think there's a point where one says, that's for family, that's for me.
The first time I wore a head scarf, I was 16. I looked and felt like a nun. I missed the wind in my hair. For me, it was not a comfortable thing to wear.
People are confusing me with a good actor when I'm just a good mimic. When someone asks me to play a nun from the fifteenth century, you'll see what I mean.
All of us kids ended up 'doing Mom.' There are four of us who've tried show business. Five if you insist on counting my sister the nun, who does liturgical dance.
I sometimes think I was born to live up to my name. How could I be anything else but what I am having been named Madonna? I would either have ended up a nun or this.
I dread my trial at the pearly gates - knowing my luck, I'll be hot on the heels of a blameless nun who will be ushered straight to a luscious cloud with prime sea views.
I have terrible handwriting. I now say it's a learning disability... but a nun who was a very troubled woman hit me over the fingers with a ruler because my writing was so bad.
Clothes are a kind of uniform. A nun's habit, a surgeon's scrubs, a cop's uniform. People often say that when they put on a certain uniform, they actually think of themselves differently.
My mother came from an Irish family of 11 kids and, of course, had a sister who was a nun, so I spent time at a convent and with an aunt and uncle who lived in New York and took me to the theater.
I was the girl who nobody thought would ever get married. I was going to be a fashion nun the rest of my life. There are generations of them, those fashion nuns, living, eating, breathing clothes.
It's a funny thing about being raised Catholic and then going to Catholic schools with nuns - the cliche about the mean nun was not what I had at all. They were very, very smart, devoted individuals.
I always wanted to play a nun, and to play the Reverend Mother was a thrill of a lifetime for me. But, generations back, my family were not churchgoers, which is an unusual thing in the United States.
You know who you are. If my mother is a nun and someone comes up to me and they go, 'Your mother is a prostitute.' It is not going to bother me, because I know my mother is a nun, she's not a prostitute.
In the third grade, a nun stuffed me in a garbage can under her desk because she said that's where I belonged. I also had the distinction of being the only altar boy knocked down by a priest during mass.
When I was a little girl, I used to walk around with a towel on my head, pretending I was a nun. And then one day my mother said, 'Why don't you just become an actress, and then you can pretend you're a nun.'