That's no moon. It's a space station.

Styling is designing for obsolescence.

My contribution to film has always been negligible.

I shrivel up every time someone mentions Star Wars to me.

Who is more foolish? The fool or the fool that follows it?

A superb tenor voice, like a silver trumpet muffled in silk.

I don't know what else I could do but pretend to be an actor.

Failure has a thousand explanations. Success doesn't need one.

Best performance of the year: Aston Villa v. Milan, September 1994

A person who is keen to shake your hand usually has something up his sleeve.

All creative people hate mathematics. It's the most uncreative subject you can study.

The applause of all but very good men is no more than the precise measure of their possible hostility.

Essentially, I'm a small-part actor who's been lucky enough to play leading roles for most of his life.

An actor is at his best a kind of unfrocked priest who, for an hour or two, can call on heaven and hell to mesmerize a group of innocents.

I never knew how good it is to be unknown until now. The last time I was unknown I was too busy trying to become known to realize the advantages of obscurity.

An actor is totally vulnerable. His total personality is exposed to critical judgment - his intellect, his bearing, his diction, his whole appearance. In short, his ego.

There seems to be no end to the senseless wickedness done on this little planet in a minor solar system, and we puny mortals appear to be decreasing in importance so far as the universe is concerned.

Young men make wars, and the virtues of war are the virtues of young men: courage, and hope for the future. Then old men make the peace, and the vices of peace are the vices of old men: mistrust and caution.

An Actor is an interpreter of other men's words, often a soul which wishes to reveal itself to the world but dare not, a craftsman, a bag of tricks, a vanity bag, a cool observer of mankind, a child and at his best a kind of unfrocked priest who, for an hour or two, can call on heaven and hell to mesmerize a group of innocents.

Much of the day I have busied myself making notes on the small parts in Shakespeare, often nameless, which are rewarding to the actor if only he'll not dismiss them as beneath his dignity. If I can work it up into a talk I might call it, 'Only a cough and a spit ' -the phrase so often used by actors to explain away a lack of opportunity.

We live in an age of apologies. Apologies, fake or true, are expected from the descendants of empire builders, slave owners and persecutors of heretics, and from men who -in our eyes- just got it all wrong. So, with the age of 85 coming up shortly, I want to make an apology. It appears I must apologize for being male, white, and European.

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