I`m sure you`ve heard that description, `Jimmy Stewart from Mars.` Yes. Because a part of him is really so sweet and pure and innocent. He`d tell me my take was `Jim-dandy`, or `Doggone it, Sherilyn, that was cool`. His direction is abstract. He doesn`t ever say `Go do this` or `Go do that`. He`ll just tell you some weird story, or when I did Wild at Heart (1990) David`s direction was `Only think of this: bobby pins, lipstick, wallet, comb, that`s it.` He`s very creative and unafraid of taking chances. We`d sit down and, `Oh, I don`t like this scene`. In Twin Peaks" (1990) he rewrote this entire scene and had me dance in the middle of the room for like three minutes. `Just groove, honey. Just keeeep moving`. I was like, `Oh, okay. I feel like an idiot. What am I doing? Okay`. Then you see it and with the music, he`s set this whole world up, this whole mood. I really respect him, he`s wonderful." - on director David Lynch
- Sherilyn FennIndividual statistics are fine and dandy, but it`s lonely out there. You want to share with the 24 other guys that helped you be successful.
- Dontrelle WillisCandy Is dandy But liquor Is quicker.
- Ogden NashYes, we know he liked a drink and we know he was homosexual, but he still remains a terribly, terribly private man. All I had to go on was a couple of interviews - one after Corbett (Harry H. Corbett) died - and Brambell`s autobiography. Unfortunately, the book doesn`t really tell you anything. Off-stage, he was a bit of a dandy. Always immaculately turned out. Overcoat, hat, cane, clean-shaven, cut-glass English accent ... he even had a different set of teeth. (On playing Wilfrid Brambell in The Curse of Steptoe (2008) (TV))
- Philip Davis"It`s silly to have as one`s sole object in life just making money, accumulating wealth. I work because I enjoy what I`m doing, and the fact that I make money at it -- big money -- is a fine-and-dandy side fact. Money gives me just one big thing that`s really important, and that`s the freedom of not having to worry about money. I`m concerned about values -- moral, ethical, human values -- my own, other people`s, the country`s, the world`s values. Having money now gives me the freedom to worry about the things that really matter." - December 1967 Playboy interview
- Johnny Carson