I won't touch on risky, because that's subjective. People are just afraid of things too much. Afraid of things that don't necessarily merit fear.
If you call on God to improve the results of a shot while it is still in motion, you are using 'an outside agency' and subject to appropriate penalties under the rules of golf.
Knowledge is of two kinds. We know a subject ourselves, or we know where we can find information upon it.
You come across quite ordinary, nondescript people in daily life, and I don't see why you should be subjected to them on the stage, too.
Anything that excites me for any reason, I will photograph; not searching for unusual subject matter, but making the commonplace unusual.
I'd have to struggle to find a subject in which I can't get some kind of interested pulse started.
Either theology is pure nonsense, a subject with no content, or else theology must ultimately become a branch of physics.
Rationalism, which is the feeling that everything is subject to and completely explicable by Reason, consequently rejects everything not visible and calculable.
I read a lot on the subject and had many conversations, and I have come to the conclusion that the Catholic Church is a force for evil.
There is no such thing on earth as an uninteresting subject; the only thing that can exist is an uninterested person.
It is only the young and callow and ignorant that admire rashness. Think before you speak. Know your subject.
What I aspire to is to have the viewer look directly at the subject, as if they're looking through a window at the real thing.
What we want is not more little books about Christianity, but more little books by Christians on other subjects--with their Christianity latent.
I continually get more information about a subject after the book has been published.
I have written about Chile extensively, and therefore I have read many books on the subject, mostly for research.
To look at ourselves from afar, to make the subjective suddenly objective: this gives us a psychic shock.
I am always looking for what piece, what artists, what playwrights, what directors, what subject matter is going to catalyze an audience.
In the end I think theatre has only one subject: justice.
I wasn't going to be a college kid. The only subject I was interested in was English. I think I had a subconscious interest in analyzing story.
If you're going to spend two or three years immersed in a subject, you better be deeply interested in it, or it won't be interesting to the reader.
I can't think of a subject that is taboo for me, unless it's one I simply don't know anything about.