A Quote by Sean Hepburn Ferrer

I remember being mesmerized by 'Love in the Afternoon,' with Gary Cooper. — © Sean Hepburn Ferrer
I remember being mesmerized by 'Love in the Afternoon,' with Gary Cooper.
It comes as a great shock…to discover that the flag to which you have pledged allegiance…has not pledged allegiance to you. It comes as a great shock to see Gary Cooper killing off the Indians, and although you are rooting for Gary Cooper, that the Indians are you.
I think they are grooming me as another Gary Cooper.
I grew up with the television product being old Western serials like Roy Rogers, and John Wayne and Gary Cooper, and many others were my favorites when I was a young person going to films.
I seldom ever missed a Gary Cooper picture if I could manage to see it.
I'm just glad it'll be Clark Gable who's falling on his face and not Gary Cooper.
If Gary Cooper and Henry Fonda had a baby, it would be Matthew Modine.
Fonda and Gary Cooper had the best sense of timing of all the actors I knew.
I remember watching Eddie Murphy's stand-up act when I was little, and just being mesmerized.
I hadn't heard the Gary Cooper thing so I'm not grounded now. I feel pretty good. That's incredibly nice. When I met Robin [Williams] at the read-through, I remember when he came in, I was so nervous meeting him for the first time is incredible because I did actually write him a letter when I was a kid and told him he was my favorite actor.
My old drama coach used to say, 'Don't just do something, stand there.' Gary Cooper wasn't afraid to do nothing.
In the days of Gary Cooper, James Stewart etc, film stars personified the better aspects of human nature.
I can only speak from experience, but as a little kid I remember Lisa Leslie, Sheryl Swoopes, Dawn Staley and Cynthia Cooper. I remember the mainstream media being involved and how much exposure they received.
Gary Cooper - the greatest listener in the world! And he used to answer in kind, which is wonderful because you don't see that anymore. People don't listen. They really don't.
The very first film I ever saw was during the war. My mother took me, I must have been about 4, and that was Beau Geste, with Gary Cooper.
I was brought up in the north of England, which is probably no rougher than anywhere else, but I remember as a child being kind of mesmerized by girls fighting on the playground.
When you're still, and some actors are really brilliant at that, you bring a kind of energy to you as opposed to sending the energy out. There are some actors, like Gary Cooper or Kevin Spacey, that are absolutely brilliant - Gene Hackman is another - at being and allowing the audience to just do the work.
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