David Bradley Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy the top 12 famous quotes, sayings and quotations by David Bradley.
Famous Quotes By David Bradley

Sometimes you can hear the wire, hear it reaching out across the miles; whining with its own weight, crying from the cold, panting at the distance, humming with the phantom sounds of someone else's conversation. You cannot always hear it - only sometimes; when the night is deep and the room is dark and the sound of the phone's ringing has come slicing through uneasy sleep. — David Bradley

William Hartnell was one of the finest character actors of our time, and as a fan, I want to make sure that I do him justice. — David Bradley

She encouraged them, allowed them to encourage her. She needed them. Because she was still not sure she could do what she had set out to do. — David Bradley

To me, it looks like an opportunity for school choice. I'd also like to see a pilot program to allow true school choice ? vouchers. — David Bradley

That is what the Slave Trade was all about. Not death from poxes and musketry and whippings and malnutrition and melancholy and suicide: death itself. For before the white men came to Guinea to strip-mine field hands ... black people did not die ... the decedent ... took up residence in an afterworld that was in many ways indistinguishable from his former estate. — David Bradley

I invented it, Bill made it famous. — David Bradley

I'm not exactly watching my back. Most people, there's a twinkle when they admonish me. And I've watched a lot of footage on YouTube of people's reactions to watching me. — David Bradley

I may have invented Control-Alt-Delete, but Bill Gates made it famous — David Bradley

I get fans stopping me and telling me what a bad man I am. I got a lot of that at Comic-Con. I'd tell them, 'Sorry, mate.' — David Bradley

And so he set about restoring them, using the tricks he had learned over the years. He went to them, speaking to each of them in tones so low that none of the others could hear, getting their names, gently touching them, asking about their pains, their fears, gently eliciting their stories, reminding them of why they had run in the first place. — David Bradley