A Quote by Spencer Dinwiddie

Indeed, there's little question that mustaches are the ultimate facial accessory. — © Spencer Dinwiddie
Indeed, there's little question that mustaches are the ultimate facial accessory.
As for a signature accessory, I believe in something totally unique that I love and is very personal. It could be a fab pair of vintage earrings I picked up on my travels or a beautiful brightly colored hat or heels, or a fun clutch or handbag. Truthfully, though, the ultimate accessory is a big smile and positive energy!
I love mustaches with all my heart. There's just something about sketch comedy and mustaches.
No elegance is possible without perfume. It is the unseen, unforgettable, ultimate accessory
Most mustaches lie waiting for some Clark Gable or Tom Selleck to fix them in the mind. The greatest are identified with a single man, a bad man, usually, who so wrapped his identity with a particular configuration of facial hair that the two became inseparable.
Catholic girls with tiny little mustaches.
It is the unseen, unforgettable, ultimate accessory of fashion that heralds your arrival and prolongs your departure.
When I design a garment or a piece of accessory, the first question I ask myself is, 'Would I wear it?'
Love becomes the ultimate answer to the ultimate human question.
I believe how a character eventually turns out is completely attributable to an actor. Even with a meaty role, if I am enacting it as an accessory, I will look like an accessory.
I love a really, good in-depth facial, I've had the vampire facial. But I have my limits.
God is the ultimate philosophical questioner, the one who asks the logically paradoxical ultimate philosophical question about the nature of his own existence.
The existence of God is not logically necessary, and yet, on the basis of some profound peculiar empirical order in the universe, it seems that He exists as the ultimate uncreated Being, implying a paradox, as no logically unnecessary entity can be uncreated. This paradox is the ultimate question asked by God, who is nothing but the ultimate questioner.
Glasses, earrings, rings, sneakers. I love every little accessory.
As for facial hair, I think I decided it was a good look after graduate school. I always shave it myself and trim my own beard. I change the look depending on the role. For 'Million Dollar Baby,' I had no facial hair. For 'Men in Black 3,' I had no facial hair but did wear a wig.
Since I don't smoke, I decided to grow a mustache - it is better for the health. However, I always carried a jewel-studded cigarette case in which, instead of tobacco, were carefully placed several mustaches, Adolphe Menjou style. I offered them politely to my friends: "Mustache? Mustache? Mustache?" Nobody dared to touch them. This was my test regarding the sacred aspect of mustaches.
Gestures and facial expressions do indeed communicate, as anyone can prove by turning off the sound on a television set and asking watchers to characterize the speakers from the picture alone.
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