A Quote by Peter O'Toole

I've never looked for women. When I was a teenager, perhaps. — © Peter O'Toole
I've never looked for women. When I was a teenager, perhaps.
When I came to America, there were two kinds of women: women who looked serious and who didn't wear color and print, and women who looked girly and feminine and like second wives.
I looked over at her; if women knew how good they looked in the dash light of oversized pickup trucks, they'd never get out of them.
I always loved women that looked strong and active, actual athletes, that's the sort of women I looked up to.
I came in the Dawson's Creek era; it was all about tiny guys who looked like teenagers, and I haven't looked like a teenager ever. So I was, like, auditioning to be their dads. At 25.
I can't pretend to be a teenager, but I feel like I never really stopped being a teenager.
I never had a desire to be a filmmaker. As a child and a teenager and in college, I was not aware of black women making films.
Women who come to see me admit that they've never looked at their sex organ; they've never seen their clitoris. Now tell me if that isn't a form of being psychologically genitally mutilated? For them, the clitoris doesn't exist, but we're worried about women in Africa!
Days and nights passed over this despair of flesh, but one morning he awoke, looked (with calm now) at the blurred things that lay about him, and felt, inexplicably, the way one might feel upon recognizing a melody or a voice, that all this had happened to him before and that he had faced it with fear but also with joy and hopefulness and curiosity. Then he descended into his memory, which seemed to him endless, and managed to draw up from that vertigo the lost remembrance that gleamed like a coin in the rain - perhaps because he had never really looked at it except (perhaps) in a dream.
Perhaps we’ve never been visited by aliens because they have looked upon earth and decided there’s no sign of intelligent life.
Perhaps we've never been visited by aliens because they have looked upon Earth and decided there's no sign of intelligent life.
I've always looked upon the Ducks as caricature human beings. Perhaps I've been years writing in that middle world that J.R.R. Tolkien describes, and never knew it.
The actors I looked up to when I was a teenager, they all just disappeared into different characters.
It took me a long time to realise that I was a girl as a teenager. At that point I never really believed it. I looked like a boy for a long time. Now, finally, I feel like a woman.
Whatever art is, it is no longer something primarily to be looked at. Stared at, perhaps, but not primarily looked at
I got to L.A. in 2000, when we were coming off the '90s: women looked like men and the men all looked like women.
He looked at her the way all women want to be looked at by a man.
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