I always wore the highest heels possible, because the other women on the show were tall.
‐‐ Donna Mills
I always work from an outline.
‐‐ Sarah Mlynowski
I always work from an outline, so I know all the of the broad events and some of the finer details before I begin writing the book.
‐‐ Mercedes Lackey
I always work in a room where there's no Internet to keep from being distracted so easily.
‐‐ Jeffrey Eugenides
I always work on my abs, every single day. As Miss Universe, exercising your abdominal muscles is mandatory!
‐‐ Gabriela Isler
I always work on New Year's Eve, no matter what.
‐‐ Debbie Harry
I always work only with friends, but it must be about them and myself. Because I film only very personal moments, nothing preplanned, staged or written, it has to be real and spontaneous. Some of them have become famous, some are not yet famous, some will never be famous. But they are all my friends.
‐‐ Jonas Mekas
I always work out. I do Pilates and yoga.
‐‐ Kim Delaney
I always work out of uncertainty but when a painting's finished it becomes a fixed idea, apparently a final statement. In time though, uncertainty returns... your thought process goes on.
‐‐ Georg Baselitz
I always work the same way, starting from the beginning of the weekend, so I know at the beginning of the race, from all that I have analysed during the practice, whether I will win the race or not.
‐‐ Alain Prost
I always work with 18 friends.
‐‐ Ingmar Bergman
I always work with a goal - and the goal is to improve as a player and a person. That, finally, is the most important thing of all.
‐‐ Rafael Nadal
I always work with the tempo of the energy of the character, whether he's fast or slow, or heavy or light.
‐‐ Mads Mikkelsen
I always worked in institutions, I never had a restaurant of my own before, but I have opened over 30 hotels, restaurants and casinos. I understand what it takes to keep them running.
‐‐ Robert Irvine
I always worked mostly in Quebec. I never thought of the States, somehow. I don't know - I don't have blue eyes or blond hair. I thought I didn't fit with the stereotype of America.
‐‐ Karine Vanasse
I always worked pretty steadily. But maybe out of some kind of fear, I put the brakes on letting myself be as successful as I'd like to be. More and more, I've taken the brakes off and let whatever happens happen.
‐‐ Josh Pais
I always worked very hard against the unconstitutional individual mandate in health care. I didn't praise it.
‐‐ Michele Bachmann
I always worried I'd forget my lines or say the wrong words or the audience would laugh in the wrong places.
‐‐ Lawrence Welk
I always worried that the creative well would dry up. I was sure that if I wrote a book a year, I would eventually run out of ideas. Actually, the opposite has been true for me. The more I write, the more ideas come to me and it gets easier.
‐‐ Kelley Armstrong
I always worry I've probably written one too many Bernie Gunther books and that I should probably give him his gold watch.
‐‐ Philip Kerr
I always worry that I'm a dilettante: I know something about lots of things but don't have exhaustive knowledge of much.
‐‐ John Darnielle
I always would be happy to make a character even more unlikable, but you know, there's a limit and if you go there, you get into a very different kind of movie, man.
‐‐ Paul Giamatti
I always would dream of making music videos. Whenever I make music, I always have a visual in my mind. I always see things.
‐‐ Dan Reynolds
I always write about subjects which attract me because if I didn't, it would be awful, a failure.
‐‐ Ruth Rendell
I always write about the things that haunt me, the questions I have.
‐‐ Caroline Leavitt
I always write about what interests me.
‐‐ Ruth Rendell
I always write after I think for quite a long time, so the actual writing time is rather short. I think a lot of the work gets done when you have something on your mind while you're doing many other things.
‐‐ Helen Vendler
I always write authors after I read their books. I've been doing it for years. I write a formal letter and send it to them in care of their agent. My mother always taught us to write thank you notes, and if an author puts themselves out there, they like to hear that their book connected with someone.
‐‐ Maria Semple
I always write back to people who are kind enough to write to me. Actually, I don't write - I recline on my red velvet sofa with my feet on the coffee table and dictate the letters to my eldest son.
‐‐ Sue Townsend
I always write 'Fight' on the mirrors - that goes way back to the times when you had to fight apathy.
‐‐ Ron Moody
I always write in pencil, so I can erase.
‐‐ Elsa Peretti
I always write lyrics first and the rhythm and the melody come from the lyrics. It always comes from the lyrics: words have rhythm and words have melody.
‐‐ Ken Hensley
I always write my first draft in longhand, in lined notebooks. I move around the house, sitting where I like, and watch the words spool out in front of me, actually taking a lot of pleasure in the way they look in my strange handwriting on the page.
‐‐ Sue Miller
I always write my music based on what is going on in my life at the time.
‐‐ Janet Jackson
I always write on unlined typing paper and write the first draft in longhand, using cheap Bic pens. I try to write about four pages a day, which usually yields a first draft in six months. I don't plot ahead of time, so I'm flying by the seat of my pants for the first draft.
‐‐ Tess Gerritsen
I always write out of a need to read something, rather than a need to write something.
‐‐ Jonathan Safran Foer
I always write stories, and I write poems, too. I just never sell them to anybody, but I write them. They're good, too. They never leave the house. They're too disclosing.
‐‐ Richard Bausch
I always write the pieces I want to write.
‐‐ Harrison Birtwistle
I always write the script by myself.
‐‐ Bong Joon-ho
I always write these movies that are far too big for any paying customer to sit down and watch from beginning to end, and so I always have this big novel that I have to adapt into a movie as I go.
‐‐ Quentin Tarantino
I always write things that entertain me, and one of the things that I find really enjoyable to explore is the idea of love. I like looking at my own life and my friends and family and how love changes who you are. It fascinates me.
‐‐ Stephenie Meyer
I always write three or four projects at the same time. They're stories that I want to tell, and usually I dump them unfinished for the next one in order not to get too cornered and depressed about it.
‐‐ Pawel Pawlikowski
I always write to understand my place in the world. I can see myself and my life unfold on the page, and I can understand my strengths, my weaknesses - I can see where I need to step up a bit.
‐‐ Jason Mraz
I always write what feels really true and honest and me.
‐‐ Carly Rae Jepsen
I always write with music. It takes me a while to figure out the right piece of music for what I'm working on. Once I figure it out, that's the only thing I'll play.
‐‐ Kate DiCamillo
I always wrote about things that were important to me. I think our past success showed that it was also important for a lot of others.
‐‐ Gavin Rossdale
I always wrote. I wrote every day. I don't think I could have written 'Just Kids' had I not spent all of the '80s developing my craft as a writer.
‐‐ Patti Smith
I always wrote. I wrote from when I was 12. That was therapeutic for me in those days. I wrote things to get them out of feeling them, and onto paper. So writing in a way saved me, kept me company. I did the traditional thing with falling in love with words, reading books and underlining lines I liked and words I didn't know.
‐‐ Carrie Fisher
I always wrote little things when I was younger. My first opus was a book of poems put down in a spiral notebook at five or six, handsomely accompanied by crayon illustrations.
‐‐ Nicole Krauss