Scripts Quotes

Quotes tagged as "scripts" Showing 1-17 of 17
Diana Rose Morcilla
“Your life is a movie. You are the main character. You say your scripts and act to your lines. Of course you do your lines in each scene. There is a hidden camera and a director who you can ask for help anytime up above.”
Happy Positivity

Shannon L. Alder
“God has a way of picking a “nobody” and turning their world upside down, in order to create a “somebody” that will remove the obstacles they encountered out of the pathway for others.”
Shannon L. Alder

Craig D. Lounsbrough
“Abundant living is realizing that life is a privilege whether it’s adhering to our scripts or not.”
Craig D. Lounsbrough

V.C. Andrews
“God, He didn't write the scripts for the puny little players down
here.
We wrote them ourselves-with each day we lived, each word we spoke,
each thought we etched on our brains. And Momma had written her
script, too.
And a sorry one it was.”
V.C. Andrews, Flowers in the Attic

“What monster sleeps in the deep of your story? You need a monster. Without a monster there is no story.”
Billy Marshall

Shannon L. Alder
“Every writer dreams about the day they can step into their fiction and wander its hallways.”
Shannon L. Alder

Anne Flanagan
“I re-traced your footsteps to that miserable little Tibetan monastery. It was hard to get the monks to talk, what with that vow of silence and all – and how do you threaten someone who regards death as a promotion?”
Anne Flanagan, Artifice

“I intend to see that justice is done by presiding, in the manner of the omnipotent Walter Mitty, as chief justice of a tribunal trying the case of those plotting further advances for the Chinese characters on an international scale. Emulating the operatic Mikado's "object all sublime... to let the punishment fit the crime," I hand down the following dread decree:

Anyone who believes Chinese characters to be a superior system of writing that can function as a universal script is condemned to complete the task of rendering the whole of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address into Singlish.

John DeFrancis, The Chinese Language: Fact and Fantasy

Leslie Jamison
“One definition of living might be the perpetual swapping of story lines. We trade in the scripts we've written for ourselves and get our real lives in return.”
Leslie Jamison, Make It Scream, Make It Burn

Matthew  Perry
“I was always bad at reading scripts. Back then, I’d be offered millions of dollars to do movies and barely crack the first few pages. I’m embarrassed to admit that now, given that these days I’m writing scripts myself and it’s like pulling teeth to get actors to respond. Maybe they feel how I used to feel: that in a life of fun and fame and money, reading a script, no matter the size of the number attached, feels all too much like school.

The universe will teach you, though. All those years I was too this, too that, to read a script, but last year I wrote a screenplay for myself and was trying get it made until I realized that I was too old to play the part. Most fifty-three-year-olds have worked their shit out already, so I needed to hire a thirty-year-old. The one I chose took weeks and weeks to respond, and I couldn’t believe how rude his behavior was.”
Matthew Perry, Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing

“Pilot scripts are particularly difficult to write because you have to introduce all the characters without it feeling like a series of introductions.”
Tina Fey, Bossypants

“To embody a slice of life on stage/film/script/book is awe-inspiring; like peeking into a window to the soul or prima materia”
Val Uchendu

Craig D. Lounsbrough
“Every single day in a thousand different ways, the script that I am writing across the pages of my life is dramatically impacting how others are writing theirs. And if I dare to recognize that I am writing far more scripts than this single one that I hold in my hand, would I not hold the page of this day and apply the pen of how I lived it in an unimaginably different way?”
Craig D. Lounsbrough

Glennon Doyle
“I took control back with words, sentences, chapters and scripts. I started with the story’s resolution in mind… and worked backwards from there. I do not know if I lived the next few years and then wrote about what happened, or wrote the next few years; and then made it all happen.”
Glennon Doyle, Untamed

Owen Barfield
“The record of rocks is a script containing stored memories of earth's past.”
Owen Barfield, Saving the Appearances: A Study in Idolatry