Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
Show business is my life. When I was a kid I sold insurance, but nobody laughed.
I'm in show business... I want to hang out with Janet Jackson, not Jesse Jackson.
Buzz and the right publicist are not only important but crucial in show business.
There are two reasons why I'm in show business, and I'm standing on both of them.
The first rule of show business is get off the stage while people still want more.
I thought success in show business was everything. It isn't. I don't know what is.
I'm not all that enthralled by show business, and I'm not that much of a highbrow.
I want to do things I enjoy, and show business comes fifth or sixth down the line.
I'm just a giddy teenager who would like to break into show business any way I can.
Wrestling is a business, it is show business and wrestling championships are props.
Unlike a lot of actors, my father encouraged all his kids to go into show business.
Show business pays you a lot of money, because eventually you’re gonna get screwed.
I don't have a lot of lifetime regrets, and very few show business regrets, surely.
When I'm asked how to succeed in show business, I always say I haven't the foggiest.
No one in my family is in show business, unless you count dog shows as show business.
I said, 'If I don't play football for a living, I'm going to get into show business.'
Playing music is the best thing in the world. It makes show business almost bearable.
I'd rather be a flop at show business than to be a success at something I didn't like.
It was very important to me that I be my own person. That's why I chose show business.
We need a president who realizes that there's no government business in show business.
I don't know what my life would have been like if I'd never gotten into show business.
That's what I loved about show business, no two days were alike. It's an exciting life.
There's no job in show business that's harder than any other job outside show business.
I never intended to be in show business; I intended to be an extremely grounded person.
The basic problem with young people entering show business is that they are in a hurry.
I'm a showgirl. After 20 years in show business, I've learned to roll with the punches.
We're against hypocrisy, lies, bigotry, show business, insincerity, phonies, and fakers.
I decided to retire from show business at the age of 17, because I didn't like it a bit.
There's no business like show business, but there are several businesses like accounting.
As far as show business, it's the gratification of doing something that pleases the fans.
I think it's the business part of the word show business that causes me the most concern.
I'm in a whole different part of show business. I'm not even part of Shakespeare in Love.
There's no damn business like show business - you have to smile to keep from throwing up.
I was a weirdo to want to be in show business. Most kids wanted to be teachers or nurses.
A lot of show business, as you know, is about all the contacts you make and who you know.
Show business comes with wonderfully long vacations, like the life of a college professor.
I'm oddly not competitive. What I love about show business is there is a home for everyone.
I'm not in show business; I'm in the communications business. That's what it's about for me.
There are some people in show business who are proud of the number of marriages they've had.
Back In 1982, I started in show business with my brothers. We started a break dancing group.
My life hasn't been the norm. The most interesting parts are before I got into show business.
None of my family had anything to do with show business, my life was totally foreign to them.
No matter what the role, you're trying to do the impossible - make a living in show business.
You can still have a very productive, crime-free life when you're growing up in show business.
I feel I need to have people outside of show business who keep me grounded and define who I am.
If you can survive 'Saturday Night Live,' then you're good as far as show business is concerned.
It's heartbreaking to see theater people be forced to accept the business side of show business.
If you are going to survive in business, show business or any business, then you have to be bold.
I believe most people don't go into show business unless they've been majorly unloved as a child.
I'm not good at doing show business; I'm a theatre person. I don't reveal anything about my life.