logo

Quotes About Drama

E se o telefone tocar diga que eu morri, que estou mortinho da silva, estirado no chão da sala com o coração na mão. Diga que retirei meu coração com a mão – ele estava doendo demais.
~ Caio Fernando Abreu
You'll like Drama," Alex promised a couple of hours later. We were walking across a wide swath of green lawn that separated the school's Little Theater from the main classroom building. "Mr. Barnes, the teacher, is great. He makes the whole thing really interesting and fun. Even the performing part isn't too humiliating." "Gee, that's a relief.
~ Cameron Dokey
when the truth is not as dramatic as the rumour, it gets altered.
~ Candace Fleming
When any problem occurs, you have two choices: you can get upset about it, or you can simply figure out what needs to be done. Getting upset has a seductive quality to it; there is rich drama to be had there. The cost is that there is no happiness to be had. Happiness opens up when you drop the drama and start looking for what needs to be done. Any relationship improves when both people shift from complaints to statements of what they want.
~ Gay Hendricks
The fight they had outside the Roseland Theater in front of a bunch of punks and hipsters.
~ Gayle Forman
Ride of the Valkyries
~ Gayle Forman
and things are about to get pretty crazy in this alleyway. Even for Amsterdam.
~ Gayle Forman
Todo el mundo es un escenario, y todos los hombres y mujeres meros actores: tienen sus salidas y sus entradas; y un hombre en su tiempo interpreta muchos papeles...
~ Gayle Forman
For to Paul the chief actor in this drama had come upon the scene; the Messiah had been made present, and could not but be looked upon as henceforth the dominating figure in all further developments.
~ Geerhardus Vos
Within the holy circle of the stage, geometrical principles are used to organize physical energy so that the beauty of the human form reveals a web of drama and truth---that is the essence of dance as I have come to know it.
~ Gelsey Kirkland
Oh, boy. Why did I have a feeling I'd just aligned myself with Tweedle Diva and Tweedle Devious?
~ Gemma Halliday
There was something so best-musical-ever when people screamed and begged for mercy, and she could listen to a good musical all day.
~ Gena Showalter
On way. He OK? Aeron Coming. Something wrong? Lucian Take me out of your address book. William
~ Gena Showalter
I'm going to my room," Jessie Kay called. "Y'all do me a favor and argue loud enough so I can listen in without having to strain myself.
~ Gena Showalter
I'm married, yes, but not for long. This girl will be getting a speedy annulment." Another step. "No need. I'll make you a widow.
~ Gena Showalter
because they had been an emotional, volatile couple, and had fought as passionately as they'd loved.
~ Gena Showalter
The author relates that the word "OBSCENE" springs from the concept in Greek drama that certain actions would be performed outside the scene or off the stage. He clarifies that the Greeks did not shy away from shocking actions, but they knew that portraying them in the audience's view would drown out the emotional subtlety of the character development and ethical dilemmas.
~ Gene Edward Veith Jr.
he seemed to grasp a deep understanding of the unfolding drama in which he had been caught. He seemed to understand something that few of even the wisest men of his day understood...God wanted a broken vessel.
~ Gene Edwards
If New York was a piece of music, then this was the ominous pause leading up to an intense climax.
~ Genevieve Cogman
I would stay on, but 'General Hospital' honestly doesn't seem to want that relationship with this character at the moment. They want little short doses during sweeps periods.
~ Genie Francis
Xander hadn't talked to me since Sunday. Which was REALLY bumming me out. Like, usually when he says he'll never forgive me and I'm dead to him? He gets over it in like an hour. So this was pretty serious.
~ Geoff Rodkey
the song and dance musical comedies that prevailed in the 1920s and '30s and the integrated musicals that became more influential in the 1940s and '50s both allow a meaningful dramatic relationship between songs and their shows.
~ Geoffrey Block
Tragedy takes all under regard.
~ Geoffrey Hill
No one loves to tell a tale of scandal, but to him that loves to hear it.
~ George Berkeley