If a person doesn't have the capacity that we all want that person to have, I suspect hope is in the far distant future, if at all.
I download TV shows more and more, especially from the US.
The iPhone revolutionised the mobile industry, rather like the iPod before it with the personal music player.
I think competitiveness between two people is still relevant, and the battle of the sexes still intrigues.
It's important in show business to have friends who understand the cut and thrust of everyday working life and the constant rejection.
I still buy CDs and DVDs, but generally for more obscure material.
There are lots of good directors I would like to work with; I want to be inspired and challenged by them.
The craftiest trickery are too short and ragged a cloak to cover a bad heart.
On pain of death, no person be so bold.
No amount of manifest absurdity. . . could deter those who wanted to believe from believing.
All the arguments there are against Malcolm [Turnbull] - and there are many - the one thing in which he is impeccable and why I would support him in this is that he has an absolutely impeccable record on the question of colour and race. People often wondered why. What I see as a possible explanation is [that] he came from a very wealthy family - a 'squattocracy' - and he had private education at home and then he went to boarding school at Melbourne Grammar School, one of those lead schools in Australia.