He actually came up to me and we started speaking. And from that conversation we were able to come to a meeting of the minds and it seemed as if it was clear to me that he wanted to do similar things to what I wanted to do.
‐‐ Maurice Ashley
He allowed us to choreograph the sex scenes.
‐‐ Linda Fiorentino
He alone is free who lives with free consent under the entire guidance of reason.
‐‐ Baruch Spinoza
He alone loves the Creator perfectly who manifests a pure love for his neighbor.
‐‐ Venerable Bede
He also didn't like a lock of my hair and said that he couldn't get into the moment without the hair being just right. I quietly knew that he was anxious and that the hairdo wasn't the real issue. But we all let it go and came back to the scene sometime later.
‐‐ Madeleine Stowe
He always describes his characters' voices and their physique so brilliantly. As people have said, they are cartoons, caricatures. They're grotesques really.
‐‐ Simon Callow
He and I were about as compatible as a rat and a boa constrictor.
‐‐ Stevie Nicks
He and Reagan were not at all alike, because Reagan is an optimist and Dick Nixon wasn't. Yet in some ways they were alike. Neither really liked to talk on the telephone, for instance. And, in a lot of respects, both of them were very much loners.
‐‐ Lyn Nofziger
He appeared every night, like myself, at about nine o'clock, in the office of Mr. Tyler, to learn the news brought in the night Associated Press report. He knew me from the Bull Run campaign as a correspondent of the press.
‐‐ Henry Villard
He asked if I was a songwriter, and I said yeah, that I was in town because I'd won this contest. He said, okay, then he was gonna play me his hit, and started singing 'When it's time to relax, one beer stands clear... '
‐‐ Arthur Godfrey
He asked me whether I had seen the movie 'The Color Purple.' I said no she hadn't. And Bobby said, 'Well, it's a terrible picture. They don't make good, decent, moral pictures nowadays.'
‐‐ Tommy Bond
He asked my girlfriend if we could come over and sing some of the songs that we had written, which we did. After he heard the songs, he said that he knew someone in the record business by the name of Bob Shad.
‐‐ Phil Harris
He asked why and I said, 'Because Gwyneth has a fat suit, my wife has a fat suit - I don't get a fat suit?' He looked at me and said, 'You mean you don't have one on?'
‐‐ Joe Viterelli
He ate and drank the precious Words, his Spirit grew robust; He knew no more that he was poor, nor that his frame was Dust.
‐‐ Emily Dickinson
He behaved like an ostrich and put his head in the sand, thereby exposing his thinking parts.
‐‐ George Carman
He believes in romance. He isn't merely going through the mechanical movements of a man in an exciting situation. He is, vitally and positively squeezing the last drop of delight from living the best life he knows in the best way he can.
‐‐ Leslie Charteris
He best keeps from anger who remembers that God is always looking upon him.
‐‐ B. C. Forbes
He bit his lip in a manner which immediately awakened my maternal sympathy, and I helped him bite it.
‐‐ S. J. Perelman
He bore no grudge against those he had wronged.
‐‐ Simone Signoret
He brought a sensibility and a hard-edged reasonableness to operating restaurants that had a lasting impact on me and still affects how I run all our restaurants today. The passing of 'Restaurant Man' - the original gangsta 'Restaurant Man,' my father - was the passing of an era. No one can replace him.
‐‐ Joe Bastianich
He brought imagination to the story of the Creation.
‐‐ Harvey Keitel
He came by a leap to the goal of purpose, not by the toilsome steps of reason. On the instant his headlong spirit declared his purpose: this was the one being for him in all the world: at this altar he would light a lamp of devotion, and keep it burning forever.
‐‐ Gilbert Parker
He came to the States in 1963, I think with a view to making up with my mother, but that didn't work. He came for three weeks, and drank his way all over Brooklyn. And went back... I went to his funeral in Belfast.
‐‐ Frank McCourt
He can be as good as he wants to be; that's how good he can be.
‐‐ Mark Lawrenson
He can develop sense and style, in the manner of distinguished modern prose, in which event he may be sure that the result will not fall into any objective form.
‐‐ John Crowe Ransom
He can fight terrorists overseas, but he leaves our borders so they can come in here and do their thing.
‐‐ Tom Tancredo
He can't decide whether to leave his visor half open or half closed.
‐‐ Murray Walker
He can't even be at a casual read and not be creating the whole thing in his mind. I remember feeling very awed about how much he still seems to be so in love with it, and so dedicated to making everything really real and really spontaneous.
‐‐ Amanda Peet
He can't imagine the result of the mission because he never saw it.
‐‐ James Dickey
He can thread a needle with a well-turned phrase.
‐‐ Don Hewitt
He can who thinks he can, and he can't who thinks he can't. This is an inexorable, indisputable law.
‐‐ Pablo Picasso
He carried his childhood like a hurt warm bird held to his middle-aged breast.
‐‐ Herbert Gold
He climbs highest who helps another up.
‐‐ Zig Ziglar
He comes to London and gets a job in a nightclub, a gay club, where he's known as Straight Dave by the bar staff - and no one believes he's as straight as he claims to be. He meets the daughter of the club manager, and he has an affair with her.
‐‐ Neil Tennant
He comes to this other world and he has to reinvent himself. Again, it felt natural, even though I'd been working really hard trying to come up with something.
‐‐ Michael Chabon
He conquers who endures.
‐‐ Persius
He considers me just a uterus with legs.
‐‐ Mary Beth Whitehead
He considers the theatrical version of Fanny and Alexander an amputated version of what his original film was, and he doesn't really like the shorter film.
‐‐ Bille August
He convinced me that if we're going to have honest government that you can't leave it up to the crooks and that honest people have to get involved in government. So I did. I got involved as a criminal prosecutor with the U. S. Justice Department.
‐‐ Bill Scott
He could have made a difference. He could have brought real jobs and development to hard working communities that need and deserve those resources. Instead, William Boyland, Jr. worked to glorify one person, and that was himself.
‐‐ Loretta Lynch
He could have made it right with the book. But he hasn't. He is a revisionist of history. He has lied.
‐‐ Monica Lewinsky
He could not die when trees were green, for he loved the time too well.
‐‐ John Clare
He could not see a belt without hitting below it.
‐‐ Margot Asquith
He'd believe anything provided it's not in Holy Scripture.
‐‐ Douglas Feaver
He'd forgiven who he needed to forgive, let go of what he needed to, and accepted himself as he was. Archibald Alexander Leach, Cary Grant, and all.
‐‐ Jennifer Grant
He'd never seen Seinfeld, so he didn't know who Puddy was or anything.
‐‐ Patrick Warburton
He dares to be a fool, and that is the first step in the direction of wisdom.
‐‐ James Huneker
He decided to plunge on with pardons over the department's objections, or where he knew that there would be objections if he had let career prosecutors know what he was doing.
‐‐ Barbara Olson
He described how, as a boy of 14, his dad had been down the mining pit, his uncle had been down the pit, his brother had been down the pit, and of course he would go down the pit.
‐‐ Barbara Castle