'The Outlaw Josey Wales' is one I watched again and again and again in the early days of VHS.

Do you seriously expect me to be the first Prince of Wales in history not to have a mistress?

I have won 85 caps and have had a great career with Wales and have enjoyed every minute of it.

I wish Wales was more represented on the British stage, and I have missed that being in London.

Whenever I have an opportunity, I catch a train and go to Wales and hire a car and drive around.

Playing for Wales or making my debut for Liverpool, it was excitement, a feeling of freedom even.

Every time I manage Wales and you win, the feeling is better than I've ever had as a club manager.

Wales is blessed with some truly magnificent castles, full of history and a must see for visitors.

Nothing escapes the vigilance of the New South Wales police; their reputation is known the world over.

In a colony constituted like that of New South Wales, the proportion of crime must of course be great.

I'm happy to be in the centre for Wales - that's my favourite position and where I play my best football.

To me, growing up in South Wales, a pair of Diesel jeans were the thing to have - if you could afford them.

It's Northern Ireland, it's Ireland, it's Scotland, it's Wales, there's Scousers, Londoners, all behind me.

I've spent a bit of time with the Prince of Wales, who I respect greatly. I'd give two cheers for the Monarchy.

Whether I'm playing or not I'm proud. I'm as proud to play for Wales as I am Man United, to be there at the club.

I sometimes go for drives with my wife around south Wales, and always the people are so friendly and so passionate.

I really see myself as a homegirl. Wales is my first home. London is my second home - I've been there 14 years now.

In my day England, Scotland, Wales had 80 drama schools. There are none left. So there's no training, no discipline.

I love Wales, and Cardiff is great, but if I could just have the weather we have in California, it would be perfect.

We moved to Wales when I was quite young, but we frequently visited the rest of my family, especially my mother's side.

I would like to go back to Wales. I'm obsessed with my childhood and at least three times a week dream I am back there.

I worked at the Steel Company Of Wales when I was 17. My job was to supply tools to the guys working the blast furnaces.

My dad was Dublin born and bred - a Dublin boy - but he always pushed me to play for what was Wales Under-15s in my day.

I liked masculine fabrics: Prince of Wales checks, city pinstripes, and flannels - worn with black tights, flattish shoes.

My literary career kicked off in 1956 when, as a resident of Swansea, South Wales, I published my first novel, 'Lucky Jim.'

It's everyone's dream to represent Wales and when you get that chance, which I did at a young age, you've got to relish it.

There is a whole host of people that have got an accent like mine, whether they're from Merseyside or Wales or the North West.

My heart was bursting with pride the night I fought Steve Robinson in Wales, and I made the champion look like the challenger.

People can be really famous in Wales for rugby, but outside of Wales nobody really has a clue who you are or what you've done.

My novels about medieval Wales were set in unexplored terrain; my readers did not know what lay around every bend in the road.

When I'm playing for Wales Under-21s I'm always trying to do my best so if the manager is watching he can see I'm playing well.

I can only look at what Labour has done to the NHS here in Wales and it's not a good story. That includes on education as well.

To be honest, I think that I am a bit of a singer, coming from Wales; being Welsh, we are all very proud of our singing heritage.

The moment seemed right to me for a full and, if possible, authoritative portrait of the life and character of the Prince of Wales.

I'm a Prince of Wales Trust ambassador, so I'm all about giving youth an education, a voice and a chance to not take the wrong road.

I'm a regular guy, got the same friends. I live in the same area of south Wales. That's who I am. I'm just a normal guy. I just fight.

With the national team I had to go to Newcastle, Wales, I knew a little about England, but Wolves and Birmingham I did not know anything.

If I had my time again and was able to change one thing from my career then I wouldn't have retired. I would have played for Wales longer.

I spent my earliest years in Colwyn Bay in north Wales with my mother and grandmother, while my father was stationed with the RAF in India.

While I have corrected agreed factual errors, I have not been inhibited from writing what I felt to be the truth about The Prince of Wales.

I want every person in New South Wales, no matter where they live, to feel that they have the choices and the opportunities to be their best.

To be born in Wales, not with a silver spoon in your mouth, but, with music in your blood and with poetry in your soul, is a privilege indeed.

To see Liverpool win the Premier League would be fantastic being a Liverpool fan. But to get to the Euros with Wales would be just as special.

I lived in Wales back in 1982 and 1983. I studied journalism at South Glamorgan Institute of Higher Education just off Newport Road in Cardiff.

I was planning to stay in the Army all my life, but I ended up being posted to a training camp in Wales and was so bored there, I wrote a novel.

Everything I ever did in my life when I was younger revolved around wanting to play for Wales, and then you get that cap... it's hard to describe.

You think of 'Outlaw Josey Wales,' you immediately think of the old Indian guy, Sondra Locke, the old lady with the glasses, beautiful old actress.

When I kayak in Cardigan Bay, in Wales, what I hope to find above all else is dolphins. Sometimes I do, and these days are the waymarks of my life.

From the big mountains in the north to the valleys in the south, all through my childhood and teenage years, my family would always holiday in Wales.

As a child, I used to spend nearly all my summer holidays with my aunt in Wales, and we used to catch mackerel in a boat and then cook them on board.

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