2 min readApr 17, 2022
--
for more Orson Bean quotes:Click Here
- I did my teen-age years in World War II. War news was a constant. We kept the radio on in our house to hear Edward R. Murrow broadcasting from the rooftops of London, describing the blitz.
- TV has changed everything.
- Back in the fifties (the nineteen fifties, not the eighteen fifties) I did some writing for Mad Magazine, along with my friend Ernie Kovaks and a pair of comics named Bob and Ray.
- I’m greedy for experience. I keep finding new things.
- My grandfather lived in New England all his life and was a Vermonter.
- Being happy is a revolutionary act; I think it spreads, like ripples in a pond.
- I made a decision a few years back to never again do anything professionally that I didn’t want to do.
- In New Jersey, judges have ruled that a same-sex couple or a single person applying to adopt must be given the same place in line as a married man and woman. I think that’s bad for kids. This makes me homophobic? I’m in show business. Half the people in my life are gay.
- Even I get fan mail.
- Every restaurant in the world is owned by a Greek.
- My father was an odd stick. He was a member of MENSA and he was a uniformed yard cop for the Harvard police.
- Advertising has always been part show biz.
- The nineteen fifties was a time of tumultuous change.
- The movies saved my life. I grew up in the great depression, the only child of a pair of star crossed lovers. My father lost his job. My mother drank. They fought. The movies were my escape.
- I think America was a miracle. I think God loves this country.
- War was a way of life for Americans in the early forties. Heroism was expected.
- I’d lived through World War II and hadn’t been able to wait to join the army as soon as I turned 18.
- I had come to New York seeking my fortune after a few years of honing my craft as a stand-up on the road.
- The reason I became a Christian is the same reason I became a conservative: I paid attention.
- I made up my mind I was going to walk that thin line between fame and oblivion.