I wasn't like a Fifties dad.

I fought for peace in the fifties.

I don't care about hundreds, fifties, averages.

The nineteen fifties was a time of tumultuous change.

I think I'll be flavor of the month when I'm in my fifties.

Even with Yorkshire I had 19 fifties before I got my first hundred.

These are the fifties, you know. The disgusting, posturing fifties.

I'd love to be a NASCAR driver because they're, like, in their forties and fifties.

In New York in the Forties or Fifties, everybody's in a suit, an overcoat and a hat.

I felt trapped and fabricated in the fifties living up to other people's expectations.

It's funny: I don't feel like I have any particular privileged feeling for the Fifties.

Lana Turner taught me how to kiss on the set of the movie 'Diane' in the early Fifties.

We wanted a supporting cast that would appeal to Baby Boomers who grew up in the fifties.

That was really the Fifties for me - that whole spirit of flicking the paint on the canvas.

I love oldies just kind of sweet, slinky, Fifties music. The slow stuff. And Billie Holiday.

Later in the fifties I got involved in kinetic studies using my long forgotten math background.

I grew up in the Fifties and Sixties and remember how unpleasant all kinds of food could be then.

In the South America of the forties and fifties, everyone was into beauty and glamour and fashion.

Young women today, as in the fifties, find themselves entering the big world and having to make choices.

As a lad growing up in the Fifties and Sixties, I played both Gaelic football and soccer and loved them both.

Cindy McCain has emerged as a definite hottie. I think that sometimes happens to women in their early fifties.

I love that pre-mod jazz look of the late Fifties, the Steve McQueen style that influenced the British modernists.

I didn't understand 3-D in the fifties and I can't say I get it now either. I just don't see what the big deal is.

One of the things I'm most proud of about my country is the fact that we did lick McCarthyism back in the fifties.

I'm so lucky to have a career in my fifties. And to still have the desire to do it. I don't think about retirement.

My older brother had a lot of Elvis on vinyl, and really, that was my first introduction to music during the Fifties.

When I was growing up in the eighties, there was a real nostalgic streak for the fifties. Look at 'Back to the Future.'

The forties are very cool and very pastoral. The fifties look like they're pastoral, and then you get a bit more turbulence.

A lot of people like me, who've been around for years and years and years, only really lose it in their forties and fifties.

People in their forties, fifties, and onward enjoy the whole world of books in a different way than the Internet-age kids do.

Early on in my career, I used to get out in the 30s, 40s, fifties, and 60s. So I really appreciated reaching my first hundred.

English television from the Fifties to the Nineties was the least bad in the world, and now it's just as bad as it is anywhere.

Other people get moody in their forties and fifties - men get the male menopause. I missed the whole thing. I was just really happy.

My influences were the riff-based blues coming from Chicago in the Fifties - Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf and Billy Boy Arnold records.

'Doo-wop' is a very special word for me. Because I grew up listening to my dad who, as a Fifties rock & roll head, loved doo-wop music.

My style was established in the Forties and Fifties, then got dragged through the decades and picked up a couple more things on the way.

The high point for me in my career was when Sinatra called me his favourite performer in the Fifties. And I've been sold out ever since.

Tango was very popular in Panama at the time when I was growing up. In the Fifties in Panama, the radio stations played all types of music.

It would have been so awesome to be born in the Thirties and be in your prime in the Fifties. Except for the whole being black thing, obviously!

How little those who are schoolgirls of today can realize what it was to be a schoolgirl in the fifties or the early sixties of the last century!

My father is Hungarian and moved to Britain during the uprising, and my Spanish mum comes from Galicia; they moved here at the end of the Fifties.

You get into your late fifties, people start falling like flies all around you. I don't take life for granted any more. I'm really glad to be here.

I guess that's one of the things about growing up in the fifties - it never occurred to me that you wouldn't be at least as successful as your parents.

In my fifties, I was still in creation mode. Now I have more of a responsibility to step back and mentor and offer wisdom, offer sign posts on the path.

The fifties - they seem to have taken place on a sunny afternoon that asked nothing of you except a drifting belief in the moment and its power to satisfy.

In the fifties I had dreams about touching a naked woman and she would turn to bronze or the dream about hot dogs chasing donuts through the Lincoln Tunnel.

This might be one way to start talking about differences between the early postmodern writers of the fifties and sixties and their contemporary descendants.

I collect robots. They're mainly Japanese, American, and especially Russian - small robots, big robots, and old toy robots made between 1910 and the Fifties.

Here in L.A. the standard of beauty is kind of ridiculous. I want to be doing this when I'm in my fifties and sixties and this isn't what I'm going to look like.

The creation of Spoleto was a social experiment. Because I've always suffered guilt from being a Catholic, when I was in my fifties I felt a need of being needed.

Share This Page