I kind of picked up the game at an early age. The way that other kids would learn what a fork or a spoon is.
I suppose I'm trying to build an architecture that's as timeless as possible, although we're all creatures of our age.
Often too many expectations are put on by society as to what we're supposed to look like and it's fed to people at an age that's too young.
I married somebody half my age, and everybody thought I was crazy, but she is just an absolute angel.
Some broad themes brought me where I am today. At a very young age, my hobby became thinking and finding connections.
People get devalued in Hollywood when they age, despite all their efforts to stay relevant and beautiful and young. They can't get jobs anymore.
My education began in the public schools of Wilmington. During most of these years, from about age 10, I also worked at some job or other after school, on weekends, and in the summer months.
The secret of long life is double careers. One to about age sixty, then another for the next thirty years.
The industrial age was not about craftspeople trading peer to peer. It was about stopping that. You weren't supposed to be a craftsperson, you were supposed to be an employee.
In the large cities that received new Americans, there flowered a golden age of restaurants, manned by the available talent from abroad and fueled by the restless wealth of the newly rich.
Paradoxical as it may seem, to believe in youth is to look backward; to look forward we must believe in age.
People pay to see movies with women looking beautiful, but I think there will be a place for me to play women looking my own age.
Industrialization based on machinery, already referred to as a characteristic of our age, is but one aspect of the revolution that is being wrought by technology.
Ours is the age of substitutes: instead of language, we have jargon: instead of principles, slogans: and, instead of genuine ideas, bright ideas.
When you get to your mid-20s, you start to feel responsibilities for the things that you do and the people around you. It's a cool age.
I like growing up; I feel like I have an old soul. I like the age to match as much as it can.
I never took guitar lessons. I took classical piano lessons from the age of six when we lived in Holland.
Nobody gets irony anymore, as we are now living in the post-ironic age. Once George Bush gets a library, our irony is dead.
We live in an age of global expectations. Our hopes have converged in many ways, none more so than in our democratic aspirations.
The terror of the atom age is not the violence of the new power but the speed of man's adjustment to it, the speed of his acceptance.
I definitely don't look my age. So I actively look for roles that will help people change their perception of me.