Not to belittle what we do as actors, but my wife Helen is a teacher, and she makes a real difference to kids. So it's unusual to see people thinking of us as something special.
I love to go to casinos with my wife. I play poker, and she's an old-fashioned slot queen. She even has a visor.
I fell in love with my wife twenty years ago. I am only now, it seems, getting it through my very thick skull how lucky I am.
My wife and I both love cooking - I am an advanced male - so we argue about who gets to rustle up dinner.
The manic pursuit of success cost me everything I could love: my wife, my three children, some friends I would have liked to grow old with.
I have two children. I have a Down syndrome child whom I love very much, and my wife that I love.
My wife and I love to host wine and cheese parties. They are simple and elegant and you don't have to put a lot of effort and time into it.
There's the Bacon society, which is fostered by his fourth wife Helen Bacon, but I don't know what kind of performances his music gets. He wrote symphonic music and some chorale music.
My wife gets pampered pretty well. She's had me trained since she was pregnant, when I started making her oatmeal with fresh berries every morning.
My first wife was a brunette, and Barbi Benton, my major romantic relationship of the early 1970s, was a brunette. But since the end of my marriage, all of my girlfriends have been blonds.
There is nothing nobler or more admirable than when two people who see eye to eye keep house as man and wife, confounding their enemies and delighting their friends.
In 'Friday Night Lights,' the relationship between the coach and his wife, that marriage was something that you couldn't really understand until you actually saw it exist on film.
My wife - I married my onscreen girlfriend from 'Growing Pains', Mike Seaver's girlfriend, and we've been married for 17 years - so marriage is very important to us.
My wife says that stage acting is like being on a tightrope with no net, and being in the movies, there is a net - because you stop and go over it again. It's very technical and mechanical. On stage you're on your own.
Felicia: Who taught you to waltz? Tick: My wife. Felicia: Oh, how sweet.
[last lines] Tony Mendez: [to his wife, on the doorstep of his home after his return from Iran] Can I come in?
The Monster: You, make man... like me? Dr. Pretorius: No. Woman... friend for you The Monster: Woman... Friend... Wife...
Rocco: This guy takes out a whole family... wife, kids, everyone... like he's ordering fucking pizza.
I'm used to getting up at 7, getting breakfast, getting the kids off to school, and doing the mommy thing and the wife thing and the daughter thing.
Originally the film opened with Ryan in the doctor's office, being told his wife is dying. Then we see him walking the streets, and the story is told in flashback.
A Muslim must not hate his wife and if he be displeased with one bad quality in her, then let him be pleased with another that is good.