Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
My childhood was spent in a typical Mumbai chawl at Girgaum and I studied at the nearby St. Sebastian School.
I went to college at QUT: Queensland University of Technology. I studied for a Bachelors in finance and acting.
If I studied all my life, I couldn't think up half the number of funny things passed in one session of congress.
I studied fine arts, and color and composition was always my thing, but I've never been too wild with my fashion.
As a child, I studied violin. My sister, who's 10 years older, was the actress in the family. I was painfully shy.
Designing was always something I was interested in. I studied fashion design in high school as well as how to sew.
I would say out of all the things I studied growing up, math was probably one of the things that I liked the least.
I studied one term of law and then came to realize I had a little better fastball and curve than I did a vocabulary.
I studied in American school, so yes, I grew up speaking English and Spanish. Obviously, Spanish is my first language.
I never had any film training. I went to Northwestern. I studied education and theater. So it was all theater training.
I really love the karate thing I did on CHIPs. I studied with a trainer because I knew we'd do episodes that had karate.
I studied computer science and graphic design, yeah, so music was self-taught and a backburner thing, an obsessive hobby.
Insurance firms have always carefully studied real-world data to figure out what, precisely, constitutes a risky activity.
I studied drama at the Queensland University of Technology, which was amazing. I can't speak highly enough of that school.
I studied theatre at Glasgow University and then was lucky enough to land a scholarship with a theatre group in Edinburgh.
Some Marines made fun of the fact that I had done plays and studied poetry, but then I won the award for physical training.
Some of the best tape that I've ever studied was Mike Shanahan and John Elway in Denver, back-to-back Super Bowl win teams.
In school, I studied psychology, linguistics, neuroscience. I understand that there is a real lack of respect for the brain.
I studied history at university, so I'm always quite fascinated by the Second World War and France. That's one of my interests.
I left my career in Hollywood, moved back to New York, and went to Lee Strasberg and studied with him for the rest of his life.
Enoki mushrooms, a tasty variety commonly sold in grocery stores, were one of the first mushrooms studied for preventing cancer.
I studied movies for many years, but I am professionally an actor because I, my background is actually a stage actor and acting.
I first studied the effect of plants on humans for my Yale thesis… and it was a 185-page thesis, and luckily I got honors on it.
I studied a truckload of true crime, praying for illumination, but most true crime relies on luridness and voyeurism for effect.
I studied at the Hebrew University Medical Faculty, graduated, and was an Israel Defense Forces' combat physician on a Navy ship.
I never studied art, but taught myself to draw by imitating the New Yorker cartoonists of that day, instead of doing my homework.
I've always studied our empires to empower myself, you know, and to have ammunition against anybody who could try to put me down.
I have a dialect myself; it's more pronounced, because I have studied theatre and been in England. It's half-British, half-Indian.
I arrived from Harvard, where I had studied philosophy and the history of ideas, with a bias toward literature and formal thought.
I went to school and studied music for a year at USC, which unlocked a bunch of doors for me in terms of my relationship to music.
I never studied theatre; I learned it by doing it. If I had studied theatre, I would not be making the kind of theatre I am making.
I became enamored with photography when I was about 13 or 14 years old. I've been at it ever since. I studied seriously in the '70s.
I studied audio engineering at university. The background I am from, music was never seen as a viable career; it was always a hobby.
I studied the Bible and philosophy in college, and I think in a certain sense that's the kind of stuff that still makes my brain work.
I didn't just want to be Frank's daughter who sang Boots. I take my music very seriously and studied very hard. It's not a joke to me.
I studied at a university in Florence and finished my degree. My mother was very strict about this recipe: You need to get your degree.
I studied music at the most remedial level when I was a kid, through the Los Angeles public schools, with a little private instruction.
In my junior year, I studied geology on Saturday mornings at the Museum of Natural History. Mineralogy has always been a major interest.
I was born in Beijing and raised in England and America. I studied political science in college and film in graduate school in New York.
I grew up with another pretty darn good writer: Glenn Frey of the Eagles. We were very good friends, and we kind of studied it together.
I studied classical music for a long time, maybe 10 years, and I realized finally I was never going to have the hands to play that stuff.
More and more NFL players have been willing their bodies to science so that their brains can be studied even if they die of other causes.
I think it's always good to read local authors or relevant books. In Egypt, I studied hieroglyphics and read everything about the mummies.
I studied piano for many years, and I still play. I'm a complete amateur, and I wouldn't consider myself very good at all, but I enjoy it.
The Bay of Pigs is one of America's most infamous Cold War blunders, and it has been studied, debated, and dramatized endlessly ever since.
At college, everyone's milestones occurred in shared clumps. Everyone studied, caroused, won, lost - simultaneously. Life is not like that.
I went to college and studied theater; I went to a theater conservatory. I live in New York because I wanted to do plays and still do plays.
From my earliest days, reading was my passion, and at Cambridge, where I studied English literature, my intellectual life deepened and grew.
When I studied graphic design, I learned a valuable lesson: There's no perfect answer to the puzzle, and creativity is a renewable resource.
Eisenhower is my choice as the American of the 20th Century. Of all the men I've studied and written about, he is the brightest and the best.