Probably the biggest bring-down in my life was being in a pop group and finding out just how much it was like everything it was supposed to be against.
After all, life hasn't much to offer except youth, and I suppose for older people, the love of youth in others.
Girls see these defined roles they're supposed to follow in life, but when I was a young child, my parents told me I could be anything.
Cinema is a territory. It exists outside of movies. It's a place I live in. It's a way of seeing things, of experiencing life. But making films, that's supposed to be a profession.
I've always been sort of confused by the trajectory my life has taken. I was supposed to be on an assembly line building Buicks.
I don't know how an actress is supposed to observe and create new stuff if she hasn't been on the streets, brushing up against humanity. You have to have a life.
They say that every Jewish person is supposed to love one black person in his life. I'm glad Lorne Michaels chose me.
I love the American dream. I feel this is the place I was supposed to be in. It's beautiful. I love it.
We all eat two to six times a day. Why? Because we are supposed to, we are programmed to, we want to.
I suppose one should have an integrated personality, but I've never really seen the point.
I suppose it's easy to play a hypocritical politician with a smiling face; it's also quite gratifying to play.
With young people, there's often that carelessness, allowing yourself to get into danger - recklessness, I suppose.
Hardship is vanishing, but so is style, and the two are more closely connected than the present generation supposes.
The Barefoot College is supposed to be a sparking off process. People are adopting it and owning it, which is really the story behind the college.
Suppose Watergate had not been uncovered? I'd still be on the City Desk.
Growing up in the 1950s, in Grand Rapids, Michigan, boys were supposed to be athletic.
Sincerity is not only effective and honourable, it is also much less difficult than is commonly supposed.
I suppose I'm a lapsed Catholic. You would consider me an atheist or agnostic.
I was fortunate to have teachers that were flexible with allowing me to miss more class than I was supposed to be able to, for the sake of being able to tour.
The question is, are we happy to suppose that our grandchildren may never be able to see an elephant except in a picture book?
It was said of me recently that I suffered from an Obsessional Privacy. I can only suppose it must be true.