Kyoya: A single day can make all the difference.
I failed angst in high school. They let me graduate anyway.
Some of the best projects to ever come out of Atari or Chuck E. Cheese's were from high school dropouts, college dropouts. One guy had been in jail.
When I was in high school, I became interested in cytochemistry: chemical analysis under the microscope, and trying to understand the composition of cells.
I had always choreographed a little, beginning in high school. And I leaned toward choreography. I always had an overview of what was going on.
I wasn't even prepared to be an actress. I was 17 when I came out of high school, and suddenly became Miss World and then I became an actress.
When I went to high school, in the late 1970s, disco was in full swing and anyone who was into it dressed the part. I know I did.
Then again, I think about high school every day and I think about being a little kid every day too.
That's correct, I flunked out of high school twice because I couldn't write.
I always thought that sororities were just made up of cheerleaders from high school. And I kind of picked on those cheerleaders!
I was the only white kid in my neighborhood for most of my youth even in high school, so reverse racism was just as apparent as racism.
I just couldn't get into the high school scene at all. I was fat, ugly and weird. I just couldn't do the makeup and the hairdos.
I played golf competitively as a teenager. I actually took a year off after high school and just played golf and went to a university in France for maybe a month and dropped out.
I spent my last year of high school in Latin America, and there's a edge of salsa under all of my rhythms.
I had been on the junior Olympic team in high school for trampoline; I could do twenty-six back flips in a row.
I remember being in high school and listening to Vivaldi's 'Winter' and being so overwhelmed with emotion.
In my early teens, I was a janitor. In high school, I got up early to deliver to accounts that required early service.
II know very, very little about the ukulele, but I actually grew up playing the viola from 4th grade through high school.
I also played two years of high school football but I wasn't very, how shall I say it, talented.
I certainly went to high school with some mean girls, and I would not wish that hell on anybody.
High school is closer to the core of the American experience than anything else I can think of.