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| A father's disappointment can be a very powerful tool. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| By the time I was 8 years old, sports had pretty much taken over my life. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| Calvin had finally taken a look at the ET tape, and he had reacted just as she had expected he would. He loved it; he loved me. Suddenly he was thinking of me for everything: underwear, jeans, suits, even the Escape fragrance campaign. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| I began to believe the fairy tales: You know, how we're all out there looking for our magical missing half. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| I guess that's what I was: a set of abs. And they lit the abs and shot the abs and sent the abs on their way. The photographer didn't look at my face once. I was humiliated. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| I like parties, but I'm shy, and I often find myself standing around, feeling awkward. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| I never learned to ignore the hot lights and the giant fans. And it all seemed so ridiculous. Run in place. Look angry. Look at me like you love me. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| I spent two weeks prancing around a studio in Queens in my underwear with nine other guys. They were long days. But what the hell, it was Calvin Klein. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| I too have my own demons, and I have struggled. I've made my own mistakes, and I'm not proud of them. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| I wanted to grow up to be just like my father. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| I was going to get the Carolyn Bessette story out of her one way or another. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| I wasn't even 20 at the time, but it taught me something about drugs. They can take a good man, a warm, funny, loving family man, and turn him into a loser and worse. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| I'd been around women who put me down, made me feel bad, or said things to fuel my insecurity. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| It struck me that what I'd heard about certain celebrities was true: they had It, whatever the hell It was. Star power isn't a myth; it is tangible and forceful. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| My father was a sergeant with the Connecticut state police. My mother was a hairstylist. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| Sexually speaking, I was still a kid-and a shy kid at that. I'd gotten off to a late start, and I remained awkward around women. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| The fact is, my parents loved me, and I wanted to be worthy of their love. I wanted to make them proud. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| The people on Baywatch were about as nice a group of people as I had ever worked with. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| We were a loud, extended family. My grandparents had a store in downtown Waterbury called International Foods, and my grandmother runs it to this day. (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| What was it about Carolyn that made her so cautious about revealing herself? (Michael Bergin (1466)) | |
| A hundred eyes were fixed on her, and half as many hearts lost to her. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| All fantasy should have a solid base in reality. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| Anything that is worth doing has been done frequently. Things hitherto undone should be given, I suspect, a wide berth. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| As a teacher, as a propagandist, Mr. Shaw is no good at all, even in his own generation. But as a personality, he is immortal. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| Good sense about trivialities is better than nonsense about things that matter. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| Humility is a virtue, and it is a virtue innate in guests. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| I have known no man of genius who had not to pay, in some affliction or defect either physical or spiritual, for what the gods had given him. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| I need no dictionary of quotations to remind me that the eyes are the windows of the soul. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| I was a modest, good-humored boy. It is Oxford that has made me insufferable. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| Incongruity is the mainspring of laughter. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| It seems to be a law of nature that no man, unless he has some obvious physical deformity, ever is loth to sit for his portrait. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| Men of genius are not quick judges of character. Deep thinking and high imagining blunt that trivial instinct by which you and I size people up. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| Most women are not as young as they are painted. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| No fine work can be done without concentration and self-sacrifice and toil and doubt. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| No Roman ever was able to say, 'I dined last night with the Borgias'. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| Of all the objects of hatred, a woman once loved is the most hateful. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| One might well say that mankind is divisible into two great classes: hosts and guests. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| Only mediocrity can be trusted to be always at its best. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| People are either born hosts or born guests. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| People who insist on telling their dreams are among the terrors of the breakfast table. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| Some people are born to lift heavy weights, some are born to juggle golden balls. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| The delicate balance between modesty and conceit is popularity. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| There is much to be said for failure. It is much more interesting than success. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| To destroy is still the strongest instinct in nature. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| To give an accurate and exhaustive account of that period would need a far less brilliant pen than mine. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| To give and then not feel that one has given is the very best of all ways of giving. (Max Beerbohm (1466)) | |
| Directing is the ultimate way to bring together all the art forms I've been involved with over the years. (Xander Berkeley (1466)) | |
| I can't help but have my sights set on Scorsese, Cohen Brothers and Spike Jones. (Xander Berkeley (1466)) | |
| I want to direct films, because I am a painter and a sculptor and I've done a lot of writing. (Xander Berkeley (1466)) | |
| It's exciting that you've got an entire season to experience 24 hours of highly dramatically charged human experience. It allows for the close inspection of minutiae in behaviour. (Xander Berkeley (1466)) | |
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