Top 41 Quotes & Sayings by Dennis Potter

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a British dramatist Dennis Potter.
Last updated on April 18, 2025.
Dennis Potter

Dennis Christopher George Potter was an English television dramatist, screenwriter and journalist. He is best known for his BBC television serials Pennies from Heaven (1978), The Singing Detective (1986), and the BBC television plays Blue Remembered Hills (1979) and Brimstone and Treacle (1976). His television dramas mixed fantasy and reality, the personal and the social, and often used themes and images from popular culture. Potter is widely regarded as one of the most influential and innovative dramatists to have worked in British television.

Television's Mr. Filth: that's me.
Metaphor is embodied in language.
The knowledge that we have about what it is to be human that we have as a child is something we necessarily must lose. — © Dennis Potter
The knowledge that we have about what it is to be human that we have as a child is something we necessarily must lose.
The loss of Eden is personally experienced by every one of us as we leave the wonder and magic and also the pains and terrors of childhood.
I was given talent, and if you are given it, it is your obligation to use it.
Religion, you can't a handle on it, you just have to know or not know-people either believe or they don't believe.
I have been aware, from the age of 6, that I had talent.
Children are very cruel, yes. Of course. Children are extraordinarily cruel little creatures.
A bad act done will fester and create in its own way. It's not only goodness that creates. Bad things create. They have their own yeast.
You have to assert something about yourself in order to be yourself.
The trouble with words is that you never know whose mouths they have been in.
As a piece of literacy criticism, Freud's best writing is about Dostoyevsky. It's a kind of displaced literacy criticism.
The strangest thing that human speech and human writing can do is create a metaphor. That is an amazing leap, is it not? — © Dennis Potter
The strangest thing that human speech and human writing can do is create a metaphor. That is an amazing leap, is it not?
Therapy, as opposed to analysis, is a whole construct of myth, beautiful and creative.
Some of the words and symbols and images from childhood will continually be part and parcel of my personality.
Ideals jump across the hierarchies of the printed word.
Children can write poetry and then, unless they're poets, they stop when reach puberty.
Just letting it out is one of the definitions of bad art.
I think childhood is to everyone a lost land.
God, I'm such a lazy writer - I can't even think up new names.
The thing about imagination is that by the very act of putting it down, there must be some truth in one's own imagination.
People endure what they endure and they deal with it. It may corrupt them. It may lead them into all sorts of compensatory excesses.
That vision of a common culture is now simply a remote wistfulness.
Everything we do has consequences.
The more my work improves or broadens or widens, the more surely I tame myself.
I believe everybody is responsible for what they do themselves.
To love it too much is to obscure and not see what is there.
There's no end to the inventiveness of critics, I tell you. Because they can't write fiction, they put their impulse into their analysis of work.
It is a dangerous thing to have instant access to your emotions. — © Dennis Potter
It is a dangerous thing to have instant access to your emotions.
I did not fully understand the dread term 'terminal illness' until I saw Heathrow for myself.
As adults, we do know more, but we don't know enough. People can be very unthinkingly callous.
You just don't know writers. They'll use anything, anybody. They'll eat their young.
I also believe in cigarettes, cholesterol, alcohol, carbon monoxide, masturbation, the Arts Council, nuclear weapons, the Daily Telegraph, and not properly labeling fatal poisons, but above all else, most of all, I believe in the one thing that can come out of people's mouths: vomit.
Religion has always been the wound, not the bandage.
I haven't had a single moment of terror since they told me [I was dying]. My only regret is to die four pages too soon. If I can finish, then I'm quite happy to go.
We should always look back on our own past with a sort of contempt, as long as the tenderness is there - but please let some of the contempt be there.
Words themselves - the very material of our discourse increasingly take on masks or disguises
The nowness of everything is absolutely wondrous. [...] If you see the present tense, boy do you see it! And boy can you celebrate it.
The trouble with words is that you never know whose mouths they've been in. — © Dennis Potter
The trouble with words is that you never know whose mouths they've been in.
Politics is still crucially important. Our choices are vital, and we've got to make them and not just say, 'Oh they're all the same.' They are all the same in certain ways, alas - a political animal is such an animal.
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