Most people remember me for a couple of tunes.

I want people to remember me as a guy who works hard.

I don't want people to remember me going through the motions.

I figure that most people will remember me for the songs I wrote.

Maybe people will remember me for being a stylist, not a survivor.

I'm always surprised at how many people remember me from 'Degrassi.'

Walt gave me a VIP tour of the studio. I remember people doing voices.

Some people remember me for my color; some people remember me as a friend.

I don't have any sentimental notion about how people are going to remember me.

It doesn't matter who they put in front of me, I just want people to remember me.

I do remember the people who believed in me in the beginning. I'll never forget that.

I don't want to be a flash in the pan. I don't want people to just remember me for one thing.

I think in Vice and American Me I played very silent, rigid characters and people remember them.

I don't want to tell people how to remember me. I want people to remember me as they remember me.

People who want to remember me as Cat Stevens - welcome. Those who want me as Yusuf, you're here.

People ask me, 'How do you remember your lines?' That's nothing. That is the least of my concerns.

Fifty years from now, people will still be listening to Led Zeppelin. They won't even remember me.

I've done a lot of different kinds of things, so different people remember me for different things.

I would say people are most going to remember me for my skill on the racetrack, first and foremost.

I prefer that people remember me as a president who made reforms rather than a president who did nothing.

People pretend to know me when they don't. I feel uncomfortable when I feel like I don't remember someone.

If people remember me for any scene in a Lars von Trier film, I'm extremely honoured and forever grateful.

The nice thing is that when people come up to me, it's the football they remember, not all the other rubbish.

I've probably done more than a thousand interviews, and I can't remember what people asked me two months ago or two days ago.

People relate to my characters and see me in a different way. They identify with me and remember the nuances of my characters.

I meet hundreds of people, and I'm not going to remember them. But every single one of them will remember their interaction with me.

I did more sessions than I remember doing. There were a lot of things in the Seventies that I played on that people keep reminding me about.

I never know why people come up to me. I think a lot of them just get super-excited because they recognize me from TV but they don't remember where.

The main thing I want to have at the end of my career is to be healthy. But as for people to remember me, I want my fans to remember the type of fights I had.

I remember when I was in college, people told me I couldn't play in the NBA. There's always somebody saying you can't do it, and those people have to be ignored.

That Cornell show that - that people talk about, I can't remember that specifically. It didn't stand out for me on that tour. The whole tour was like that for me.

Growing up, I remember watching TV, and I didn't see a lot of people who looked like me, especially someone who passed as a glamorous model on a mainstream TV show.

I remember taking my demo to every dance person in London. People were like, 'We don't know what this is!' The first people to champion me were a club in Manchester.

My size is an asset to me. People write roles for me. If I was just another blond-haired, brown-eyed, 18-year-old actor, I'd be left unrecognized. People remember me.

I'm trying to go over my lines. I woke up on the floor, somebody had me in their arms. I didn't quite know who, people looked so unfamiliar. That's about all I remember.

I'm actually called Bang, a quite common name in Denmark where I'm from, so it's not like me trying to come up with a very stupid name for people to remember me or something.

People assume that the meaning of a song is vested in the lyrics. To me, that has never been the case. There are very few songs that I can think of where I remember the words.

I think that might have been an element in it, and people have asked me that very thing. Remember, Disney is the majority shareholder, but it is not an operating division of Disney.

My mother tells me I regaled people with stories but I don't remember that. And she disputes the idea that I might be chronically shy. She says I was the most outgoing of all of us.

On that Sunday of the Masters I remember turning on ESPN to find people talking about me. I switched over to the Golf Channel and people were talking about me. It was hard to escape.

I remember traveling around in Arkansas with Senator Robinson, and I told him what this little trick was. He felt very much part of it and had me take pictures of people unbeknownst to them.

I wish I were one of those terribly clever people who, when they write their autobiographies, always say, when I was fifteen months old I distinctly remember my Aunt Fanny saying to me, etc.

But I don't only get recognized for 'Friday the 13th.' I was on a TV show called' I've Got a Secret.' I was on that show for ten or eleven years. The older people always remember me from that.

I want people, when they remember me, to think of the Hall of Pain, when I was catching guys, 275 pounds. Picking up Big Show, close to 500 pounds, over my head and driving him through a table.

I use a pseudonym, because my real name is very difficult to pronounce, to remember, and to spell. And many people who have been talking about me on television have yet to pronounce it correctly.

I remember, a couple of years ago I was playing my first headline show, and it was to 100 people in St Pancras Old Church in London; and me and my mum were like, 'We don't know 100 people, how are we going to sell these tickets?'

Records are the only thing that remain of an athlete, the only thing that people will remember. If I want to ensure that people don't forget me, I can only stop once I've set the bar as high as possible for anyone coming after me.

I remember when I got my Equity card doing the Scottish play at the Public Theater with Angela Bassett and Alec Baldwin. Alec thought I should just be Butler Harner, but I thought it would make people laugh if they had to call me Butler.

I lived in a homeless shelter. That's what I mean when I say I've been in situations where people need help. I don't remember my exact age, but I remember there were two bunk beds and five of us in there: me, my three sisters and my mum.

My memory is basically visual: that's what I remember, rooms and landscapes. What I do not remember are what the people in these room were telling me. I never see letters or sentences when I write or read, but only the images they produce.

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