Everyone in my high school was a bit nerdy. We didn't even have a football team.
I graduated in 1930 and I went up to the Yale Drama School for two years.
I didn't go to acting school, but I've been observing my fellow man for 66 years now, and I would think that's the best school there is.
I started working on a TV show in Australia, straight out of high school, so I missed the whole university experience.
There was plenty of dysfunction in my family and I went to Catholic School with these psychotic nuns. I would always try to be funny to lighten the mood.
When my mother was diagnosed with cancer, my middle school friends and myself really had no idea the impact of that diagnosis, but my family did.
I've kind of blocked it out, but a good friend affectionately reminded me that yes, I was a dork. I was not a cool kid in high school.
The government gave me enough money to go to acting school.
I was bused to a school in Gerritsen Beach in Brooklyn in 1972. I was one of the first black kids in the history of the school.
You don't hate history, you hate the way it was taught to you in high school.
My mom and dad met at Anaheim High School. After they got married, all they wanted to do was have four children, and they did.
People think I have the benefit of a public school education. I have this suave and debonair label, but really, I'm as common as muck.
Education technology is very important because we have a massive challenge in public schools.
America's public schools have served their purpose. Free and compulsory education was good for a somewhat unpromising young nation.
I was a homecoming king in high school! I was involved. I was a good member of the community, I thought.
I went to a Catholic school with 40 kids total. There were no cliques, but I suppose I was the 'sporty good girl.'
When I was in high school, I wasn't a troublemaker. I didn't get in fights. I was a good student and I had a lot of friends.
I'm convinced many of America's heroes are public school teachers and administrators. Many of these people do what they do because of their faith.
Everything I am I owe to my faith and secondly to parents who were old school.
I thought that being popular in school was just so pathetic. I knew I had a future over and beyond the horizon of that school.
Well, I believe in God. I taught Sunday school.