I don't get the romances. I did try - a film called 'Roseanna's Grave' in the 1990s. I liked it. But the audience didn't come.

The actor's dream is to come in knowing that you're only supposed to do one episode and then come back because people liked it.

Once upon a time, I liked to call myself 'The Grandfather of NXT' because I was one of the first to come up as I was, from NXT.

Traveling to Russia and Germany and being able to see the world at a young age was really cool for me, and I really liked that.

I think Martin Keown was the toughest. I liked playing against him in training because I knew it was just like a game situation.

I always liked creativity, whether it was to draw or sew - any creative assignment I was getting from school, or just on my own.

In school, I wasn't a very good student - I was very irresponsible and never did the studying but always liked to get the laugh.

I never really liked Hollywood. I found it unreal - unreal and full of men and women whose lives were confused and full of pain.

I know it's cliche, but after the first show, I knew I liked singing, being on stage, making people happy. It just felt natural.

I had mice that I kept as pets when I was very young, and I've always liked the way they look. Even rats. I'm not scared of them.

I guess I was a bit of a tomboy. I liked to catch frogs in the ditch, play soccer with my brother's friends and play video games.

I've made humanitarian causes and my children much more my priority than the Hollywood scene, being liked and getting movie parts.

We really liked the magic of 'Harry Potter' and 'The Lord of the Rings,' but we could never figure out where the powers came from.

Before I went into comedy I was a loner, very much wrapped up in my own thoughts. But I always liked myself and the way I thought.

I don't think I've ever properly been in love. I've had a few girlfriends and have liked them loads, but I'm not sure it was love.

I was an observer. I liked to listen rather than openly express myself. This trait is something that I've retained over the years.

I often talked to Bing Crosby, and while I liked him, I never understood why he was so popular. To me his voice was just a gimmick.

My mom loved rock n' roll. My father hated it. We couldn't play it when he was around. He liked classical music and Duke Ellington.

I didn't wear a helmet because I wanted to show that the bowler wasn't intimidating me, and also that's just the way I liked to bat.

I came across this guy named DJ Grumble and I just really liked his beats because they were different. I felt like they spoke to me.

I'm not into that Keith Richard trip of having all those guitars in different tunings. I never liked the Rolling Stones much anyway.

I never felt that getting angry would do you any good other than hurt your own digestion, keep you from eating, which I liked to do.

Stay true to your own voice, and don't worry about needing to be liked or what anybody else thinks. Keep your eyes on your own paper.

What I particularly liked about Nineties hip hop was it had a certain reverence for the groove that I hadn't been hearing in a while.

I think most music provides the same messages - whether it be 'I'm unhappy' or 'I love a girl.' I just liked the package of rap music.

I grew up doing martial arts, and it's one of these things where I always kind of liked acting, but I was never real serious about it.

I really liked Yale, although it was extremely intimidating. When I visited the campus, I was hiding behind trees, I felt so unworthy.

I've always liked stories. I'm always reading, ever since I was a kid. I've always been reading and wanting to be in some other world.

I liked very much when we lived in Hampstead. We would go for walks on the Heath. I liked it better than living in the centre of town.

When I was young, people were almost identified solely by the kind of music they liked. People fell into categories of who liked what.

Phil Rudd from AC/DC was someone I really liked a lot... Not because I was dazzled by his playing ability - he was just a rock, y'know?

I worked 10 years as a toy designer before I started my career as a fashion designer. It's something I just fell into and really liked.

I love my sculptures, and I was lucky I had them for 50 years because no one would look at them, and I really liked having them around.

I've never particularly liked travelling with large groups or being told where to go by somebody else. I prefer to find out for myself.

I learned to question everything you read. Don't take anything at face value. Don't care what other people say. I liked that philosophy.

I never saw a discontented tree. They grip the ground as though they liked it, and though fast rooted they travel about as far as we do.

All the people who fought for freedom were my heroes. I mean, that was the sort of story I liked reading... freedom struggles and so on.

I grew up in Yorkshire, which is like the Texas of Britain. It's a proud free state and not always liked by the other counties in Britain.

My mom decorated with lots of antiques. I never liked it when I was a little girl - I wanted to live in a modern house. But now I love it.

I didn't like to be restricted, because when you're in a choir, you have a part to sing and you sing it. I always liked singing on my own.

In my school, people liked the gym teachers because they were the football or soccer coaches. But look, if they're cool, they get respect.

We just had a bunch of guys who liked each other, and we worked well together and sacrificed to win ball games. It was a real team effort.

Everyone liked me when I went up on the stage at a talent search in elementary school, and that's when I decided to become a music artist.

I've always liked artists like Chris Burden, who would take performances, put them in galleries, and then do things that were on the edge.

The orchestra confides in me about their music director or their conductor, and I've never seen a conductor that's been liked by everyone.

A sense of duty is useful in work but offensive in personal relations. People wish to be liked, not to be endured with patient resignation.

I like the Stooges. You know what movie I saw that I sort of discovered late was Jerry Lewis in 'The Nutty Professor'. I really liked that.

I wrote about people who liked fake fireplaces in their parlor, who thought a brass horse with a clock embedded in its flank was wonderful.

The manic pursuit of success cost me everything I could love: my wife, my three children, some friends I would have liked to grow old with.

I've still got Paul Scholes' shirt at home, which I swapped with him once. When I was at Liverpool, he was one of the players I liked most.

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