You cannot make a teenage idol.

I gave up my whole life to my career.

I want to love. I want to enjoy life.

Nobody likes to be rejected, you know?

I've had an awful lot of good fortune.

All that stuff - 'teen idol' - that wasn't me.

Most definitely, my dad was my biggest influence.

Most people view success by the results, and I don't.

There were times when I was a joke, but talent survives.

I've really sensed that people have an affection for me.

I don't want to end up being some joke on a bad TV series.

I don't play nostalgia acts. I don't play nostalgia shows.

If you're not a daydreamer, you haven't got any imagination.

I have an audience that goes from kids to seventy year olds.

My mother gave up a good part of her career to look after me.

I nearly died twice after I replaced Michael Crawford in 'EFX.'

I had a lot of very religious influences - Christian religious.

It's amazing what happens to your body as you get a little older.

I read in one fan magazine that I was very self-centered. And I am.

Thoroughbred racing is really my true passion. I'm living my dream.

I just want to continue to produce good work. I don't want to do junk.

Doing musicals and theatrical productions, I never did any of my hits.

Every day is a blessing - not to get too schmaltzy, but, really, it is.

My first five albums were triple-platinum, and I played a lot of concerts.

I don't need to remind myself of the trophies. I know what I accomplished.

In a very short period of time, actors can become kind of relevant and hot.

It's always nice to have people love you, but I'd just like to be judged fairly.

We are too occupied with celebrity. Believe me, it's not what it's cracked to be.

As a father, I do everything my dad didn't do. My son Beau's birth changed my life.

I've had three biographies made about my life so people know an awful lot about me.

It's a difficult journey when you're going through a divorce, is it not, for anyone?

Everything in my life was about performance when I was doing 'The Partridge Family.'

It's not about the fame and the money because if you do good work all that stuff comes

It's not about the fame and the money because if you do good work all that stuff comes.

I work for me, 18 hours a day. It's my gig. So I don't have time to get a point of view.

The television and film business has never really been kind or compassionate, in general.

I was always really proud of the fact that I had a very positive influence as a role model.

My music was never considered cool, but I've always felt that connection with the audience.

I was very wary of repeating my father's behaviour and did everything not to act like he did.

Just getting your name in the papers and having people talk about you is not always a good thing.

I saw Jimi Hendrix - it must have been four times. And he was incomparable, and his legend lives on.

Learning how to be a good parent was easy in the end because I'd basically had the What Not To Do manual.

I'm not saying that I won't tour again, but the chances are slim because my priorities are different now.

If you put the talent of all my brothers together, they wouldn't add up to the talent that was in my father.

My life has flourished in so many ways both personally and professionally that I can't ask for a better life.

I wasn't ever a bad guy, and I was never arrested or anything like that, but I was a wild boy in many respects.

It's been the work that has carried me and I never wanted to rest on my laurels or go back and do what I done before.

What I want is credibility I got as a songwriter and actor and doing 'Blood Brothers' on Broadway with my brother Shaun.

I've always had a special relationship with the U.K. fans, because even when I wasn't working they were very supportive.

There's nothing wrong with becoming a role model, nothing wrong with inspiring people to become musicians, to become actors.

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