And once by God, I was a Marine!

I studied violin when I was very young.

I only make movies to finance my fishing.

I've never been able to accept any kind of discipline.

It's important not to think too much about what you do.

I love Marlon Brando. Never seem him bad, just less good.

I know my career is going badly because I'm being quoted correctly.

If I put on a tie and play what I really think I am, I'm a disaster.

I didn't like school. Every day, it was a toss-up whether I'd go or skip.

If I have any appeal at all, it's to the fellow who takes out the garbage.

If your house burns down, rescue the dogs. At least they'll be faithful to you.

After a sheltered life, I went the other way. I wanted to prove how tough I was.

My father was the classic Puritan. Hold the emotions in check. Keep up appearances.

My father was tough. At least, he thought so, and I guess I have a lot of his traits.

It's one of the things I always do. I move faster onscreen. Creates a sense of danger.

It was the Marines who taught me how to act. After that, pretending to be rough wasn't so hard.

Newman has it all worked out. I get a million. He gets a million two, but that includes $200,000 expenses.

I know Chicago cops. They're tough. They have to be. The whole city would explode. It's like a bomb, Chicago.

One of the good things about getting older is you find you're more interesting than most of the people you meet.

Wardrobe is - in films, I could say it's a good half of the acting. You get the right rags on, they'll talk for you.

I once tried to figure out the first time I felt guilt, and it goes so far back that I might have been an inch long at the time.

I was on Saipan when I got hit. Not too bad, but bad enough to hamper me if I stayed. I was hit in my left buttocks just below the belt line.

I didn't get my hair cut for two movies, and it got a little long. I'm going back to a... not a crew cut. Back to, oh, about a Presbyterian length.

I was so overwhelmed years ago, when I was a kid, by 'All Quiet on the Western Front.' I think it was the second movie I ever saw. I never got over that one.

A guy digging ditches or a plumber wiping joints - it solves problems, you know? You have to dig this hole so wide, so long, so deep. You dig it, and that's it.

Tequila. Straight. There's a real polite drink. You keep drinking until you finally take one more and it just won't go down. Then you know you've reached your limit.

Ah, stardom! They put your name on a star in the sidewalk on Hollywood Boulevard and you walk down and find a pile of dog manure on it. That tells the whole story, baby.

As soon as people see my face on a movie screen, they knew two things: first, I'm not going to get the girl, and second, I'll get a cheap funeral before the picture is over.

In school, I couldn't see any sense to reading, writing, and arithmetic. Sure, they kicked me out, but for trifles, like continual daydreaming and smoking, that wouldn't be grounds for expulsion nowadays.

The first day of 'Liberty,' I was hanging around waiting for Ford to come in. Everybody told me how tough he was and not to say anything, or he'd single you out and get on you the whole shoot. But as he walked in, I got up and saluted him.

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