Harrison Ford has always been one of my favorite actors. I grew up with Han Solo and Indiana Jones, and 'Regarding Henry' is one of my favorite movies of all time.
‐‐ Nolan North
Harrison Ford... I love him. He's a man's man.
‐‐ Sherilyn Fenn
Harrison Ford invited me to fly on his private plane to Los Angeles, and he's great to work with. He's really down to earth, and we got to know each other quite well.
‐‐ Nonso Anozie
Harrison Ford is absolutely amazing. He is a Hollywood icon, and just to work with him was absolutely incredible.
‐‐ Carly Schroeder
Harrison Ford - one of my favorite actors - has a wonderful sense of character and depth and uniqueness to him, yet he's able to just deliver the lines without putting any English on it.
‐‐ Thomas Jane
Harrison Ford's still got it goin' on. He's very sexy in that manly-man kind of way.
‐‐ Jacqueline Obradors
Harrison Ford was pretty content as a carpenter who thought it would be nice to work on TV and ended up being the biggest film star in the history of cinema.
‐‐ Dirk Benedict
Harry Cohn did not make me. But I also feel that I probably didn't make me, either. I think it was a combination. I think that's what made it work.
‐‐ Kim Novak
Harry Collins was the first magician I ever saw back in 1965 when I was five years old. He was doing a magic show and I was the volunteer from the audience.
‐‐ Lance Burton
Harry Patch didn't get enough recognition. Jerry Garcia got too much.
‐‐ Trevor Dunn
'Harry Potter' achieved a very special act of actual magic: it made it completely acceptable for an adult to carry around, read and enjoy a children's book.
‐‐ Maureen Johnson
'Harry Potter' changed my life in more ways than one, and it helped me get through my mother's death.
‐‐ Aimee Carter
'Harry Potter' created a generation of readers in an era when kids could have disappeared into the depths of the Internet. That's no small feat. Every book series owes J.K. Rowling a debt of gratitude.
‐‐ Gary Ross
'Harry Potter' gave me back self respect. Harry gave me a job to do that I loved more than anything else.
‐‐ J. K. Rowling
Harry Potter is awesome.
‐‐ Ed Sheeran
'Harry Potter' made it cool to read children's fiction, and 'Twilight' did the same for a slightly older age group. What I'm seeing is mothers and daughters who love to read the same books.
‐‐ L.A. Weatherly
'Harry Potter' opened so many doors for young adult literature. It really did convince the publishing industry that writing for children was a viable enterprise. And it also convinced a lot of people that kids will read if we give them books that they care about and love.
‐‐ Rick Riordan
'Harry Potter' really harnessed the imagination of so many young-adult minds, and it's the same with the 'Divergent' series.
‐‐ Kate Winslet
Harry Potter represents a much larger wave of cultural revolution that we're all immersed in, and I believe it's a spiritual revolution as well - a negative spiritual revolution.
‐‐ Michael O'Brien
'Harry Potter' shouldn't be children's first experience with suspense and plot turns.
‐‐ Berkeley Breathed
Harry Potter to me is a bore. His talent arrives as a gift; he's chosen. Who can identify with that? But Hermione - she's working harder than anyone, she's half outsider, right? Half Muggle. She shouldn't be there at all. It's so unfair that Harry's the star of the books, given how hard she worked to get her powers.
‐‐ Ira Glass
Harry Potter was my first job.
‐‐ Frank Dillane
Harry Reid and the Senate haven't passed a budget. Their pay should be reduced until they do.
‐‐ Ron DeSantis
Harry Reid is not funny; he's creepy. Nancy Pelosi is creepy. Charles Schumer is sneaky and creepy.
‐‐ Lewis Black
Harry Reid rammed a partisan healthcare bill through the Senate that most Americans didn't want, and now it seems that members of his own staff don't want ObamaCare either.
‐‐ Jeff Duncan
Harry S. Truman had his moods. His birthplace is the only tourist attraction in America where you don't see Japanese with cameras.
‐‐ A. Whitney Brown
Harry Truman, who was a Bible-believing Christian Zionist, defied the secretary of state he so admired, George C. Marshall, and won a place in Israel's history by recognizing the new state 11 minutes after it declared its independence in 1948.
‐‐ Elliott Abrams
Harry Truman wrote scathing letters, but he almost never sent them.
‐‐ Robert Dallek
Harsh counsels have no effect; they are like hammers, which are always repulsed by the anvil.
‐‐ Claude Adrien Helvetius
Hart Hanson is one of the coolest, smartest producers I've ever worked for. He's very open to ideas, he says no when he should, he says yes when it would work for the show.
‐‐ Michaela Conlin
HartBeat Productions is a company established by me; it's mine. I run it. I have employees.
‐‐ Kevin Hart
Harvard freshmen are smart, interested, and excited, and it's fun hearing their different perspectives and stuff that they will share.
‐‐ Lisa Randall
Harvard has enough panegyrists without me.
‐‐ John Updike
Harvard has played an important role in my life. I was a student, Class of 1936, and I've been on the board of overseers. My experiences there shaped who I am.
‐‐ David Rockefeller
Harvard is the home of American ideas.
‐‐ P. J. O'Rourke
Harvard Law provided an opportunity to learn from a faculty that had shaped the laws of our country and helped to change the world around us. It also offered an opportunity to study with the brightest students and to test myself against the best.
‐‐ Kenneth Chenault
Harvard Medical School, the University of South Florida and the American Psychiatric Association have all conducted studies showing that the earlier one begins gambling, the more likely it is he or she will become an addicted, problem gambler.
‐‐ Spencer Bachus
Harvard produces leaders. People with Harvard degrees go on to become administrators in high-level positions in state educational departments and in public schools around the country.
‐‐ Christina Hoff Sommers
Harvard's Kennedy School of Government asked me to serve as a fellow at its Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics, and Public Policy. After my varied and celebrated career in television, movies, publishing, and the lucrative world of corporate speaking, being a fellow at Harvard seemed, frankly, like a step down.
‐‐ Al Franken
Harvard takes perfectly good plums as students, and turns them into prunes.
‐‐ Frank Lloyd Wright
Harvard University researchers found that women at high risk of heart disease who had a tablespoon of peanut butter five or more days a week appeared to nearly halve their risk of suffering a heart attack compared with women who ate one serving or less per week.
‐‐ Michael Greger
Harvard was a kind of luxurious afternoon.
‐‐ Lincoln Kirstein
Harvard was also a little bit of a villain in my first book, 'The Dante Club.' I guess there might be a way to make Harvard more of a sympathetic presence, but it's such a powerful institution that it more naturally lends itself toward not necessarily a negative but an obstructionist element in a story.
‐‐ Matthew Pearl
Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and the rest of the Ivy League are worthy institutions, to be sure, but they're not known for educating large numbers of poor young people.
‐‐ Robert Reich
Harvey and I grew up in Queens, N.Y. My brother and I shared a room for 18 years until we went away to college. When we were kids, after our father said, 'Lights out,' he also exclaimed, 'No more talking. Time for sleep.' But we'd stay up late, arguing over statistics, who the best center fielder was - Willie Mays or Mickey Mantle.
‐‐ Bob Weinstein
Harvey never had an original idea or thought in his life. I was out wandering around the country doing charity benefits, mainly, when I asked him to come along.
‐‐ Tim Conway
Harvey Weinstein bought our film, and he's an animal. He's got us out there campaigning and everything because honestly it's a silent black-and-white film.
‐‐ Penelope Ann Miller
Has any movie captured a moment in social, let alone musical, history with as much acuity and joy as 'A Hard Day's Night'?
‐‐ Richard Corliss
Has anybody ever seen a dramatic critic in the daytime? Of course not. They come out after dark, up to no good.
‐‐ P. G. Wodehouse