Castmate Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 15 famous quotes about Castmate with everyone.
Top Castmate Quotes

Always have clear lines of communication and be open to trying new ideas. Being open to new ideas is crucial to growing as an artist. If you always have the same creative habits, how will you ever excel to the next level? The answer is, you won't. Taking those creative risks reaps the most incredible rewards. — Wendy Starland

Thrift is care and scruple in the spending of one's means. It is not a virtue and it requires neither skill nor talent. — Immanuel Kant

Sometimes it is the simplest, seemingly most inane, most practical stuff that matters the most to someone. — Patty Duke

Here's an idea, how about you stop drinking? How about you go to rehab? Or you could just do us all a favor and die. — Evelyn Smith

Instead of saying that man is the creature of circumstance, it would be nearer the mark to say that man is the architect of circumstance. It is character which builds an existence out of circumstance. From the same materials one man builds palaces, another hovels; one warehouses, another villas; bricks and mortar are mortar and bricks until the architect can make them something else. — Thomas Carlyle

People say time changes things, but it's not true. Doing things changes things. Not doing things leaves things exactly as they were. — House

My sister having so much to do, was going to church vicariously, that is to say, Joe and I were going. — Charles Dickens

I don't think it's unusual to spend time with your castmate. — Isabel Lucas

People continue to conduct a heroic struggle against racism without noticing that the battlefront has shifted, and that the place of racism in imperial ideology has now been replaced by 'culturism'. — Yuval Noah Harari

To love someone is nothing, to be loved by someone is something, to love someone who loves you is everything — Bill Russell

When you can love yourself, then your heart is open to give and receive love. — Daveda Gruber

As the years passed, new myths arose to explain the mysterious objects the strangers brought from the land of the dead. A nineteenth-century missionary recorded, for example, an African explanation of what happened when captains descended into the holds of their ships to fetch trading goods like cloth. The Africans believed that these goods came not from the ship itself but from a hole that led into the ocean. Sea sprites weave this cloth in an "oceanic factory, and, whenever we need cloth, the captain ... goes to this hole and rings a bell." The sea sprites hand him up their cloth, and the captain "then throws in, as payment, a few dead bodies of black people he has bought from those bad native traders who have bewitched their people and sold them to the white men." The myth was not so far from reality. For what was slavery in the American South, after all, but a system for transforming the labor of black bodies, via cotton plantations, into cloth? — Adam Hochschild

His scorn of the great is repeated too often to be real; no man thinks much of that which he despises. — Samuel Johnson