We don't really need reviewers, just first-night reporters who will tell us faithfully whether or not the audience liked the show.
— Carroll O'Connor
The wages of pedantry is pain.
Some people thought we were presenting Archie as a false character. President Nixon thought we were making a fool out of a good man.
Not all celebrities are dunces.
My Irish derivation has nothing to do with me. Why should it?
It seems that entertainment is what most excites us and what we value above everything else.
I'm lucky. Lord, I'm lucky.
I enjoyed in every way my 12 years of playing Archie, and I wasn't personally sad about finishing a long job.
Even a true artist does not always produce art.
All in the Family was intellectual; it was art.
Vulgar and obscene, the papers run rumors daily about people in show business, tales of wicked ways and witless affairs.
The reviewer is a singularly detested enemy because he is, unlike the hapless artist, invulnerable.
Sheer flattery got me into the theater. Flattery always works with me, particularly the flattery of women.
Nations have come under the control of haters and fools.
Millions of people thought Archie was a happy hero.
In a capitalist society, persons who create capital, like Michael Eisner, are given the staggering rewards.
I have heard show business characterized as a refuge for childlike persons in flight from all things harsh and real.
I do talk less now because the sound of my voice saying over and over the things I said years ago embarrasses and depresses me. Why do I say the same things over and over?
Conventional show-biz savvy held that Americans hated to be the objects of satire.
Those offers come in now and again. They're not knocking down my door. I'm only an old character actor, and I'm not needed.
Talent can be developed, gift is God-given. But artists have both.
One irreducible residual of 38 years in the business is the number of lasting, loving friendships I have made.
My professional life in Hollywood has been filled with joy and laughter.
It was a lack of system that made the '30s Depression as inevitable as all others previously suffered.
I've run into some S.O.B. directors, but I gave them back as good as I got.
I hate pride, but if I were going to be proud of anything it would have to be something I'd done myself. Race pride is kind of stupid.
Half the pictures directed by men of reputation fail.
Both my brothers became physicians and I, of course, wandered into a business where the undisciplined are welcome.