John Keating [played by Robin Williams, pictured]: “I'll tell you a secret: we don't read and write poetry because it's pretty. We read and write poetry because we belong to the human race, which is filled with passion. Medicine, Law, Commerce, Engineering... they are noble and necessary races to dignify human life. But poetry, beauty, romance, love are things that keep us alive.”— Dead Poets Society (1989), screenplay by Tom Schulman, directed by Peter Weir
Thursday, August 1, 2024
Friday, June 10, 2022
TV Quote of the Day (‘Happy Days,’ As an Alien Enjoys Earthly Programming)
Mork [played by Robin Williams] [smiling as he watches]: “I like that boy, Opie. Why does an Earth boy have a Martian name, though?”—Happy Days, Season 5, Episode 22, “My Favorite Orkan,” original air date Feb. 28, 1978, teleplay by Garry Marshall and Joe Glauberg, directed by Jerry Paris
During the 11 seasons of Happy Days, I doubt that I watched more than a half-dozen of its 255 episodes—and I can only recall the plots of about two or three.
But a week or so ago, I was overcome with curiosity when I saw, through the “Guide” feature of my cable TV, that Robin Williams would be appearing on the sitcom, in his first time as the alien Mork from Ork. Technically speaking, it wasn’t the pilot for Williams’ own hit, Mork and Mindy, but it might as well have been, so wild was the reception that the comic received from the studio audience.
It was a good moment for
me to catch up with this episode. Considering the turns that Williams’ life and
career took—many triumphant, but ultimately sad—I wanted to see what he was
like at close to his beginning.
Watching the episode also
seemed a bit serendipitous, given the sudden renewed interest in UFOs on Capital
Hill. Republicans and Democrats agree on precious little these days, but UFOs is
one of them. (Ronald Moultrie, Pentagon Undersecretary for Defense and Intelligence, even told the lawmakers, "We want to know what’s out there just like you want to know what’s out there,” according to blogger Kim Bellard. Now they’ve even gotten NASA looking into the subject. Who’d have
thought it?
Friday, October 1, 2021
Quote of the Day (Robin Williams, on His Youthful Sports Prowess)
“I was good at cross-country. I wrestled...at 107, which is pretty much male anorexic. I played one football game as a freshman. I was so bad, the coach said, ‘You know, there's another sport called soccer.’”— Oscar-winning American actor/comedian Robin Williams (1951-2014), quoted in Dan Patrick, “Just My Type,” Sports Illustrated, February 25, 2013
Monday, August 18, 2014
Robin Williams’ Art of the ‘Broken Places’
Shortly after David Letterman jumped to CBS for his
own talk show, Robin Williams came
on as a guest. Watching, I was chuckling away, as I’m sure thousands of others
were, when the conversation took an even zanier turn, to then-tabloid sensation
John Wayne Bobbitt and his beyond-infuriated wife Lorena. The whole audience was reduced to a collective puddle of laughter, enthralled, astonished and delighted by the lightning-flash free association, the synapses jumped in a single bound by this superman of improv comics. Comedians sum up this kind of galvanic effect on listeners with a verb: killed.
*Drug use. For the last several decades, recreational drug use has been an integral part of the entertainment scene, a sign of being anti-establishment and cool. (The first decade or so of Saturday Night Live was, by common agreement, coke-fueled.) But this use, when combined with an inherent tendency toward depression, becomes especially dangerous for some users.
At some point in a not-so-distant future, as neuroscience advances, we may well look back on the current regimen for treating the comic as something from the Dark Ages, much like we now do with the electroshock therapy used disastrously on the Nobel Prize-winning novelist.
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Quote of the Day (Robin Williams, on How He Played Football)
Friday, May 15, 2009
Quote of the Day (Robin Williams, on His Heart Surgery)




