Top 28 Quotes & Sayings by Terry Southern

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American novelist Terry Southern.
Last updated on December 18, 2024.
Terry Southern

Terry Southern was an American novelist, essayist, screenwriter, and university lecturer, noted for his distinctive satirical style. Part of the Paris postwar literary movement in the 1950s and a companion to Beat writers in Greenwich Village, Southern was also at the center of Swinging London in the 1960s and helped to change the style and substance of American films in the 1970s. He briefly wrote for Saturday Night Live in the 1980s.

In the case of The Loved One, I was hired to collaborate on an updated version of the book.
It's frustrating not to have more control over your material.
Writing on a contract for a major studio you get the very best. — © Terry Southern
Writing on a contract for a major studio you get the very best.
When I finally made it to the set, I spent a lot of time doing damage control on The Magic Christian.
It was a good experience working with Roger Vadim and Jane Fonda.
I like to work at night.
David Burnett was the son of Martha Foley, who edited the Best American Short Stories series. She hired me to work with David and her to read stories for the anthology.
I met Claxton on the set of The Cincinnati Kid.
An angel has no memory.
The Loved One has been the most underrated film I've worked on.
For a director and a producer to be named on the writing credits is practically unheard of.
Peter Beard is one of those people I've known a long time. We have an affinity. We share certain values.
It's often the case with directors that they don't like to share credit, which is the case of Stanley. He would prefer just A Film By Stanley Kubrick including music and everything.
In that sense, film is superior, but the difficulty is your lack of control as a writer.
I think the degree of alienation and despair is more universal.
Someone wrote a piece about Henry Green in The Partisan Review that was so intriguing that I got one of his novels, Loving, I believe, which was the first that came to attention in the United States.
The important thing in writing is the capacity to astonish. Not shock - shock is a worn-out word - but astonish.
Sometimes we would be staked out in the middle of the river, several barges tied together. So we could party.
Grossing Out dealt with the western nations selling arms to the Third World and exploiting these countries.
When Kubrick decided to go the black comedy route with his movie, he thought of me to give it that flavor.
After Strangelove I also started work on an adaptation of The Collector.
You can't do the end of the world in a conventionally dramatic way or Boy Meets Girl way. — © Terry Southern
You can't do the end of the world in a conventionally dramatic way or Boy Meets Girl way.
I met The Beatles and Stones at the same time, because Michael Cooper was doing several of their album covers.
An absolutely devastating ridicule of all that is false, primitive, and vicious in current American life: the abuses of power, hero worship, aimless violence, materialistic obsession, intolerance, and every form of hypocrisy.
I don't know why, but I always feel a kind of necessity to write things that are beyond acceptance, that are too offensive or something. For people to read them and say, Ha-ha-ha, very funny. No, we can't print that.
I learned not to care ... and to write for an imaginary reader whose tastes were similar to my own.
I'm not interested in attacking, I'm interested in astonishing.
There is no power on earth that can loosen a man's grip on his own throat
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