My girlfriend and I rented a nice house on the river and I was there for about two and a half months, and we were just out of Alabama. I hardly got to see Alabama.
I'm sure there were plenty of loving, attentive mothers in the 'me generation,' but none of them lived at my house.
As long as I can remember, growing up we had a guitar around our house, and I was always plucking on it.
The last thing I want is to walk into my house after a long day and see all the Grammys and awards. It would make me feel weird.
I was brought up in a tenement house in a working district. We didn't even have a bathroom! We had a gaslight in the hallway and a black-and-white TV.
I don't mind dying, I'll gladly do that, but not right now, I need to clean the house first.
by and large,mothers and house wives are the only workers who do not have regular time off.They are the great vacationless class
When one stops working at the height of one's career, it's just stupid not to say, 'I want to make sure I have a house.'
That's such a thrill - a story I wrote at the beginning of my career, and it's still packin' the house.
Big houses are not build by big or powerful men but rather by ambitious and determined men. Their achievements make them big/powerful men
Home is not necessarily, where the heart is. It is also, where good food,people, and sanity resides. even if that accounts for a house, with no people in it.
I remember reading 'Disturbia,' one of the first scripts I ever got, and I go 'Pfft, who wants to make a movie about a guy in a house?'
The first Mardi Gras I went to, I stayed at the Tulane AE Pi house on Broadway. Slept on a pool table one night, slept under it the next.
Other people might want a Ferrari, but I wanted a butterfly house. I built it together with a blacksmith. We designed it together.
I relate to Nora's transformation in Henrik Ibsen's 'A Doll's House,' and I also relate to both sisters' journeys in John Madden's film 'Proof.'
I've always liked older ladies, ever since my mother would have B'nai B'rith at our house.
I grew up poor and used to look at people in big houses and thought they had everything. Then later on I looked at models in magazines and thought they had it all.
Look, I'm a member of the House of Lords and I'm the first to admit that I don't understand how one gets new laws through.
When I made my Broadway debut, I was still cleaning houses, something I'd done since I went out on my own at 15.
In Riyadh, there's going to be a huge project that will house at least 12,000 units with inhabitants of approximately 150,000 people. It's like a city within a city.
I have two lovely parents who support everything I do, two siblings, and three beautiful nieces. My house is always filled with laughter and fun!