I am the most well-adjusted human being I know. I started out this investigation as a very happy man with a great career. I've got the life people dream about: I am rich, I am famous, I've got a fabulous marriage to an absolutely, spell-bindingly brilliant woman.
I dream that someday the step between my mind and my finger will no longer be needed. And that simply by blinking my eyes, I shall make pictures. Then, I think, I shall really have become a photographer.
Right now my career is totally schizophrenic, because when an American production like Hitchcock Presents asks to see my work I would never dream of showing them my independent films.
My sole focus as far back as I can remember was all about my dream to become a singer.
Being a star is an agent's dream, not an actor's.
I always dreamt of being a basketball player. A dream that only I believed in.
Singing is my dream and, while it may have not been a commercial success, critically I was thrilled with the reception my first album got.
Doing a half-hour TV show is a dream.
I had always wanted to be on SNL, it's not always great, but it's this leftover childhood dream.
I was appointed Poet Laureate. It came totally out of the blue because most Poet Laureates had been considerably older than I. It was not something that I even had begun to dream about!
I loved to read, but I always thought that the dream was too far away. The person who had written the book was a god, it wasn't a person.
The American Dream is a phrase we'll have to wrestle with all of our lives. It means a lot of things to different people. I think we're redefining it now.
Dream no small dream; it lacks magic. Dream large. Then make the dream real.
I started looking at small companies that were running a sort of virtual reality cottage industry: I had imagined that I would just put on a helmet and be somewhere else - that's your dream of what it's going to be.
It's a dream part, running around with guns, being an agent.