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Abraham Polonsky

Read through the most famous quotes from Abraham Polonsky




A holiday is when you celebrate something that's all finished up, that happened a long time ago and now there's nothing left to celebrate but the dead.


— Abraham Polonsky


#celebrate #dead #finished #happened #holiday

A man could spend the rest of his life trying to remember what he shouldn't have said.


— Abraham Polonsky


#his #life #man #remember #rest

Do you know what it's like to love and be alone?


— Abraham Polonsky


#do you know #know #like #love #to love

I'll give you my answer calmly and sensibly, my final answer. My final answer is finally no. The answer is no! Absolutely and finally no! Finally and positively no! No! No! No! N - O!


— Abraham Polonsky


#answer #calmly #final #final answer #finally

If you don't get killed, it's a lucky day for anybody.


— Abraham Polonsky


#day #get #killed #lucky #you

Money has no moral opinions.


— Abraham Polonsky


#moral #opinions

You must never throw away things that are worth good money.


— Abraham Polonsky


#good #money #must #never #things






About Abraham Polonsky






Did you know about Abraham Polonsky?

He participated in union politics and establiAbraham Polonskyd and edited a left-wing newspaper The Home Front. Filmography
Golden Earring (with Frank Butler and Helen Deutsch) (1947)
Body and Soul (1947)
Force of Evil (with Ira Wolfert) (1948) (also Director)
I Can Get It for You Wholesale (with Vera Caspary) (1951)
Odds Against Tomorrow (with Nelson Gidding) (1959) (uncredited)
Kraft Suspense Theatre (1965) (TV)
Seaway (1965) (TV)
Madigan (with Howard A. A Marxist until his death Polonsky publicly objected when director Irwin Winkler rewrote his script for 1991's Guilty by Suspicion a film about the Hollywood blacklist era by revising the lead character (Robert De Niro) into a liberal rather than a Communist.

Abraham Lincoln Polonsky (December 5 1910 - October 26 1999) was an American film director Academy-Award-nominated screenwriter essayist and novelist blacklisted by the Hollywood movie studios in the 1950s in the midst of the McCarthy era.

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