Choose language

Forgot your password?

Need a Spoofbox account? Create one for FREE!

No subscription or hidden extras

Login

#harris

Read through the most famous quotes by topic #harris




A piece of happiness should never be taken as due.


Charlaine Harris


#happiness #sookie-stackhouse

Once again, I had that feeling of drowning when I hadn’t even known I was in the pool


Charlaine Harris


#dead-and-gone #sookie-stackhouse #sookie-stackhouse

Emmy Lou Harris introduced me to the work of the Vietnam Veterans of America foundation and the Campaign for a Land Mine Free World.


Mary Chapin Carpenter


#campaign #emmy #foundation #free #free world

I think if you play a character that is fearless, then it's boring. I think that's what was so incredible about Harrison Ford, is that he always seemed like he was never going to survive it, he's always scared, and yet he always does survive it somehow.


Oded Fehr


#always #boring #character #does #fearless

Harrison Ford... I love him. He's a man's man.


Sherilyn Fenn


#harrison #harrison ford #him #i #i love

I had a good time working with Russell Crowe, Ron Howard and Ed Harris. It was a great cast and Russell worked really hard, doing tons of research and questioning everything.


Jennifer Connelly


#crowe #doing #ed #ed harris #everything

I'd worked with Mel Harris before, I love working with her, she's great.


David Keith


#great #harris #her #i #i love

In 1972, George Harrison invited me to accompany him on a trip to India.


Gary Wright


#george #george harrison #harrison #him #india

He wondered what O'Brian would have been like in a real war, one in which he actually had to fight rather than just take pictures. Then he wondered what he would have been like. Most of the men he knew asked themselves that question, as if never having fought somehow made them incomplete - left a hole in their lives where a war should have been. Was it possible that this absence of war - marvellous though it was and so forth: that went without saying - was it possible that it had actually trivialised people? Because everything was so bloody trivial now, wasn't it? This was The Trivial Age. Politics was trivial. What people worried about was trivial - mortgages and pensions and the dangers of passive smoking. Jesus! - is this what we've been reduced to, worrying about passive smoking, when our parents and our grandparents had to worry about being shot or bombed? And then he began to feel guilty, because what was he implying here? That he wanted a war? ... He was glad it was over, of course, in a way - but at least while it was on people like him had known where they stood, could point to something and say: well, we may not know what we do believe in, but we don't believe in that.


Robert Harris


#robert-harris #age






back to top