Act One Quotes

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Act One Act One by Moss Hart
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Act One Quotes Showing 1-9 of 9
“The only credential the city asked was the boldness to dream. For those who did, it unlocked its gates and its treasures, not caring who they were or where they came from.”
Moss Hart, Act One
“Can success change the human mechanism so completely between one dawn and another? Can if make one feel taller, more alive, handsomer, uncommonly gifted and indomitably secure with the certainty that this is the way life will always be? It can and it does!”
Moss Hart, Act One
“It was possible in this wonderful city for that nameless little boy -for any of its millions- to have a decent chance to scale the walls and achieve what they wished. Wealth, rank or an imposing name counted for nothing. The only credential the city asked was the boldness to dream. For those who did, it unlocked its gates and its treasures, not caring who they were or where they came from.”
Moss Hart, Act One
“Self-pity is not a pleasant emotion and is a fruitless one as well, for its point of no return is an onset of black despair in very short order.”
Moss Hart, Act One
“There is something maddening about mediocrity that calls forth the worst in those who are forced to deal with it.”
Moss Hart, Act One
“down, rousing Priestly Morrison from the depths of his seat, where he had sunk so low that only the top of his hat was visible. He”
Moss Hart, Act One: An Autobiography
“The general conception that all actors are born exhibitionists is far from the truth. They are quite the opposite. They are shy, frightened people in hiding from themselves- people who have found a way of concealing their secret by footlights, make up and the parts they play. Their own self rejection is what has made most of them actors.”
Moss Hart, Act One
“A sharp sense of the ironic can be the equivalent of the faith that moves mountains. Far more quickly than reason or logic, irony can penetrate rage and puncture self-pity.”
Moss Hart, Act One: An Autobiography
“Poverty does more than rob one of creature comforts and the right to live with dignity—its thievery can encompass the loss of a brother and father as well. Shaw was correct when he declared that poverty was a sin against God and man alike, and he might have added that ugliness, which is a concomitant of poverty, can be equated with evil. I resolved to do something about both. I”
Moss Hart, Act One: An Autobiography