Quote by Anthony Anderson
My wife and I have always trusted each other, and I have to thank

My wife and I have always trusted each other, and I have to thank her strength. – Anthony Anderson

Other quotes by Anthony Anderson

You can say what you want to about a rapper in a movie, but look at what Ice Cube has done. Ice Cube has created more opportunities for other actors to get jobs in this business than some actors have. – Anthony Anderson

Category:
Business
Read Quote
Other Quotes from
strength
category

Method is more important than strength, when you wish to control your enemies. By dropping golden beads near a snake, a crow once managed To have a passer-by kill the snake for the beads. – Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Category:
strength

I want kids to understand that strength doesnt come from what goes on around you. It comes from inside you, and that comes from Jesus Christ. – Willie Aames

Category:
strength

You are talking to a man who can only play a plastic keyboard. Give me anything weighted and Ive had it. I havent got the strength in my fingers to push them down. So I dont get a lot of expression on the keyboard. – Midge Ure

Category:
strength

You get elected, often, if youre a woman, on the strength of the womens vote then you get into office, and you have to adapt to an overwhelmingly male environment. – Eleanor Clift

Category:
strength

Random Quotes

Every time you get on a stage or in front of a camera, the whole exercise is about imagination. Youre constantly depicting something that doesnt exist, and trying to find the reality of it. Once you settle on that premise, everything else is a matter of degrees. – Ron Perlman

Category:
Imagination

Compression of poetry is so great I often explode. Out of the house to walk off a poem. – William Corbett, “On Reading: Notes & a Poem,” The Agni Review, No.22 (1985)

Category:
Poetry

History is herstory too. – Author Unknown

Category:
Feminism

To those who visited the old Library of Congress at the Capitol he will always be associated with it — a long, lean figure, in scrupulous frock, erect at a standing desk, and intent upon its littered burden, while the masses of material surged incoherently about him. – Herbert Putnam, of librarian Ainsworth Rand Spofford (1825–1908), 1908, wo

Category:
Sitting