I'd always loved movies. I watch them all the time; my dad is a huge movie buff.
‐‐ Austin Butler
I'd always loved poetry and I'd always loved writing music and composing music, but I hadn't thought of putting the two together until around that time.
‐‐ Bruce Cockburn
I'd always loved strings. When I was in high school and saw strings playing on stage, an orchestra or a symphony, all those bows moving at the same time... wow.
‐‐ Isaac Hayes
I'd always loved technology. It's something I always messed around with in computer labs at school. So I glommed onto it very early as way to differentiate myself in business.
‐‐ Daniel Suarez
I'd always loved to read - and come from a family of readers - but I never thought about writing as a career.
‐‐ Nora Roberts
I'd always loved watching YouTube videos, and that's what inspired me to make them myself. Initially I was drawn to makeup tutorials - I learned everything I know about makeup from YouTube.
‐‐ Zoe Sugg
I'd always loved writing, in the same way that I'd loved painting. I wouldn't have seen it as a career.
‐‐ Robyn Davidson
I'd always maintained an image so that people wouldn't approach me.
‐‐ John Lurie
I'd always much rather be second choice on anything because it makes you work harder.
‐‐ Noel Clarke
I'd always need a creative outlet. But sometimes, I do fantasize what my life would be like if I weren't famous.
‐‐ Jodie Foster
I'd always put on little shows at home, but when I was 11, I did a community event in Woodford, where anyone could go. You had three days of vocal training and performed your song at the end. I sang 'I Say a Little Prayer.' It's a tough song to sing but they gave me the confidence to go for it and belt it out.
‐‐ Naomi Scott
I'd always rather be lucky than smart.
‐‐ Donald Luskin
I'd always rather be working - and you know what? My kids would rather me be working. If I stay at home, I'll only buy another car or spend their money.
‐‐ Danny Trejo
I'd always read omnivorously and often thought much literary fiction is read by young men and women in their 20s as substitutes for experience.
‐‐ Neil Cross
I'd always really wanted to act; but the modelling contracts came more easily.
‐‐ Jamie Dornan
I'd always said that I'd like to have a title by the next Olympics, so this is a great opportunity, and could be the start of my climb to a world title.
‐‐ Billy Saunders
I'd always somehow felt slightly as if I'd been born in the wrong country.
‐‐ Christopher Hitchens
I'd always step up to the mark to serve the people of the country.
‐‐ Johann Lamont
I'd always suspected my face wouldn't fit in drama departments. And it never did!
‐‐ Paul Greengrass
I'd always tell my mom, 'I want to be famous like Claudia Schiffer or Brigitte Bardot.'
‐‐ Charlotte McKinney
I'd always thought Cage's 'Root of an Unfocus' would be great in a movie.
‐‐ Robbie Robertson
I'd always thought hurricanes were romantic, with pretty feminine names like Celestine.
‐‐ Mark Shand
I'd always thought that if Python was going to go on at all, it'd be nice to get into storylines.
‐‐ Terry Jones
I'd always thought that, in all the great sci-fi constructs, there's always the guy who seems like he's the commander, but then you reveal that there's an even bigger puppet master up above and beyond him.
‐‐ Dan Fogelman
I'd always thought that 'NYPD Blue' really would open those doors. While I think it created a much broader template for cable, I don't think it really did that much for network television.
‐‐ Steven Bochco
I'd always thought the Rats were good fun, but one of the very nice things about being of Saga age is that I can actually look back and think, When I was younger I was in a great band. It was always a collective thing.
‐‐ Bob Geldof
I'd always told people that I would have liked to pursue some sort of professional fight career. I don't know if I'm quite right for it, since I'm extremely prone to injury. I've been boxing for a couple years, and I've messed around with some Jiu-Jitsu, and I've always felt that there's such a passion in a real fighter's heart.
‐‐ Matt Cohen
I'd always tried not to worry about the size of the role or the size of the film.
‐‐ Kevin Bacon
I'd always tried to resist playing the supervirility thing. I liked showing the vulnerability of age.
‐‐ Clint Eastwood
I'd always try to get a C, maybe a B. Other girls would trot off a brilliant essay and go off to Oxford; I'd think: 'Where is the justice?' I took A-levels in English, history and theatre studies and got three Bs.
‐‐ Romola Garai
I'd always used humour as a weapon, as a protection. But being able to make people laugh is a way of not getting in too deep; it's a quick, transient fix.
‐‐ Michelle Gomez
I'd always vaguely expected to outgrow my limitations. One day, I'd stop twisting my hair, and wearing running shoes all the time, and eating exactly the same food every day. I'd remember my friends' birthdays, I'd learn Photoshop, I wouldn't let my daughter watch TV during breakfast. I'd read Shakespeare.
‐‐ Gretchen Rubin
I'd always want to decorate my bedroom. I needed visuals and to be stimulated by things. I'm still like that. It's the way I see the world.
‐‐ Rob Zombie
I'd always wanted the show to be more reality based science fiction, something along the lines of The Day the Earth Stood Still, which I consider to be the classic science fiction film.
‐‐ Gil Gerard
I'd always wanted to be an action heroine. That's a chick dream, getting to wear a leather bodysuit and be blonde and kick ass. But, what really attracted me to 'Dredd' was the script. It was fantastic! It was about people and characters, and not just about explosions and fighting.
‐‐ Olivia Thirlby
I'd always wanted to be an actor, ever since I was very little. I don't know why.
‐‐ Lydia Leonard
I'd always wanted to be an actress, and suddenly I knew that learning to control my facial muscles was one of the best assets I could have as a performer.
‐‐ Jane Greer
I'd always wanted to be an actress or a model or a singer.
‐‐ Abbey Clancy
I'd always wanted to be on Broadway one day, but it seemed like a dream that might be unattainable. This business has a lot of ups and downs and I learned that pretty quickly.
‐‐ Kara Lindsay
I'd always wanted to do an R&B and soul record; a friend with a studio asked to come by and record a couple of songs, maybe just make a 45. Then the songs started to pour out, and pretty soon we had eight or 10 songs down.
‐‐ Nathaniel Rateliff
I'd always wanted to do these types of things - pieces of magic I could put out not as illusions, but really doing it.
‐‐ David Blaine
I'd always wanted to live in San Francisco, and my circumstances never permitted it. I'm so happy I made the move.
‐‐ Mitch Kapor
I'd always wanted to work in the studio and experiment with sounds. Things that I'm really influenced by and that I love are like The Beatles and Radiohead, and all those records by bands whose music is really involved.
‐‐ Regina Spektor
I'd always wanted to write a novel, but after attending film school, I'd spent five years knocking on Hollywood's door and had put that idea aside.
‐‐ Ransom Riggs
I'd always wanted to write books ever since I was a kid.
‐‐ Carl Hiaasen
I'd ask myself, 'What do I think is really unjust?' That should be a starting point for how you engage with the world.
‐‐ Chelsea Clinton
I'd asked around 10 or 15 people for suggestions. Finally one lady friend asked the right question, 'Well, what do you love most?' That's how I started painting money.
‐‐ Andy Warhol
I'd aspired to give people a profound education - to teach them something substantial. But the data was at odds with this idea.
‐‐ Sebastian Thrun
I'd auditioned for the National Youth Theatre and I didn't get a place and it was terrifying.
‐‐ Matthew Macfadyen