Choose language

Forgot your password?

Need a Spoofbox account? Create one for FREE!

No subscription or hidden extras

Login

Robert Morley

Read through the most famous quotes from Robert Morley




Anyone who works is a fool. I don't work - I merely inflict myself upon the public.


— Robert Morley


#fool #i #inflict #merely #myself

If people take the trouble to cook, you should take the trouble to eat.


— Robert Morley


#eat #people #should #take #trouble

Names were not so much dropped as thrown in a perpetual game of catch.


— Robert Morley


#dropped #game #much #names #perpetual

The British tourist is always happy abroad as long as the natives are waiters.


— Robert Morley


#always #british #happy #long #natives






About Robert Morley

Robert Morley Quotes




Did you know about Robert Morley?

Morley attended Wellington College Berkshire which he hated followed by RADA. Death
Morley died in Reading Berkshire from a stroke aged 84. Gilbert)
Beat the Devil (1953) (Peterson)
The Good Die Young (1954)
The Rainbow Jacket (1954) (Lord Logan)
Beau Brummell (1954) (King George III)
The Adventures of Quentin Durward (1955) (Louis XI of France)
Loser Takes All (1956)
Around the World in Eighty Days (1956) (Ralph in the Reform Club)
Law and Disorder (1958)
The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw (1958)
The Journey (1959)
The Doctor's Dilemma (1959) (Sir Ralph Bloomfield-Bonington)
The Battle of the Sexes (1959) (Robert MacPherson)
Oscar Wilde (1960) (Oscar Wilde)
The Young Ones with Cliff Richard (1961) (Hamilton Black)
Go to Blazes (1962) (Arson Eddie)
The Road to Hong Kong (1962) (Leader of the 3rd Echelon)
The Old Dark House (1963) (Roderick Femm)
Murder at the Gallop (1963) (Hector Enderby) (opposite Margaret Rutherford)
Ladies Who Do (1963) (Colonel Whitforth)
Take Her She's Mine (1963) (Mr.

In Movie Encyclopedia film critic Leonard Maltin describes Morley as "recognisable by his ungainly bulk bushy eyebrows thick lips and double chin [. Robert Adolph Wilton Morley CBE (26 May 1908 – 3 June 1992) was an English actor who often in supporting roles was usually cast as a pompous English gentleman representing the Establishment.

back to top