It's emotional to be leaving 'Page Three.' It's been my life since I was 18, and I'm so grateful for the chances it gave me.
I think the idea of 'Mary Poppins' has been blowing in and out of me, like a curtain at a window, all my life.
'Catcher in the Rye' changed my life when I was a kid. I read it as I was a boy turning into a man, and I was so fascinated by the values. I believe in it.
I gave my life to become the person I am right now. Was it worth it?
I'm there to make a kind of theatrical music that is desperately missing in my life. And if other people don't like it, I'm very unhappy, but I can't do anything about that.
I think the most important thing I have done in my life is to raise two boys.
My life has been enriched by excellent human relations, work and interests. I have never felt lonely.
In 'A Likely Story,' I wanted to recreate the events, the mood, and the imagery of my life as a teenager. I was thirty-seven when I wrote it.
I went through a lot of my life not being mindful of how I was living it. I wasn't mindful environmentally, or whether I was on track.
I remember reading the script for 'Dangerous Liaisons' and thinking that I could quite happily spend the rest of my life watching this film; the story and the writing were so wonderful.
I have a lot of wonderful people in my life - probably five, collectively - who I can tell everything to.
When I'm trusting and being myself as fully as possible, everything in my life reflects this by falling into place easily, often miraculously.
The fact of the matter is that the most unexpected and miraculous thing in my life was the arrival in it of poetry itself - as a vocation and an elevation almost.
There has been nothing more impactful on my life and meaningful to me than the introduction of Christ. That, hands down, blows away every joke I've ever written.
My life is not nuts. I hardly ever watch television, I don't go out very much, so I don't really know what's going on.
My life as a professional athlete has allowed me the opportunity to visit and live in many different places and meet many interesting and diverse people.
For a while, I had this uncontrollable urge - this addiction to danger. Now I look back and I think, 'Gee, what an idiot. I was risking my life just for the sensation of it.'
I don't need to manufacture trauma in my life to be creative. I have a big enough reservoir of sadness or emotional trauma to last me.
I never imagined when I began writing in the early 1960s I'd become professional and my life would be transformed.
I think, in my life, there've been three times I've broken down into tears on a set because I was happy.
When people say, 'If I had my life over again I wouldn't do anything different,' well, I'd do everything differently just for the variety.