Words matter. These are the best Scream Quotes from famous people such as Pedro Martinez, Tom Hodgkinson, Leslie Jordan, Aurora, Iris Murdoch, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I just try to do what I have to do and let the people out there do what they have to do, which is have fun, scream, yell and jump around. I try to do what I have to do, which is play baseball, and I can only play in that piece of area there, so that’s what I try to do.
Punk was a protest against work and against boredom. It was a sign of life, a rant, a scream, a rejection of bourgeois morals. But have things improved since then? Arguably, they’ve got worse.
I don’t mind playing gay because there’s a whole plethora of gay roles out there, but if I get asked to play one more Southern hairdresser, I’m going to scream.
Luckily for me, people don’t scream at me that much in my everyday life.
Perhaps when distant people on other planets pick up some wavelength of ours all they hear is a continuous scream.
The things which are most important don’t always scream the loudest.
I don’t like to yell and scream. I actually hate it.
‘Scream Queens’ was a big, sensational show. There’s nothing subtle about a Ryan Murphy show, and I love that.
I don’t go to the mall a lot ’cause girls scream and run at me, and I get shy.
But I like being nasty. I like being cranky. Especially if it’s a cold day in Chicago, it’s nice to just take it out on Kyle, because he’s so easy to scream at, you know?
I would walk down the street and people would scream from their cars at me and, generally, I’d turn around and it’s a 13-year-old girl. And it’s funny because that is the audience that I think big studios are always trying to target.
I love that everyone on ‘Scream Queens’ has a moment where they are the hero, and they are the villain.
I think what is British about me is my feelings and awareness of others and their situations. English people are always known to be well mannered and cold but we are not cold – we don’t interfere in your situation. If we are heartbroken, we don’t scream in your face with tears – we go home and cry on our own.
One guy came to a show and was like, ‘You’re going to be huge. I can see it in my mind’s eye. We could make you the next Pixie Lott.’ I did an internal scream and ran away.
At this point in my career, ‘Scream’ is one of the longest running stories I’ve told. It’s fascinating to still have actors who are very much into continuing their roles and have great chemistry.
To me, collaborating with other women is almost like when you meet a girl in the bathroom and scream about how much you love each other’s hair. Everyone’s sound is so different, which creates something special when you mix it together.
I believe zealously in conservative ideals, but Nebraskans want people who get things done, not just those who scream at each other.
There’s a lot of times when I just want to scream into the void.
You need to let the drivers go for it, and if they bang wheels, too bad. It’s fun, it’s a good show, the fans are up in the grandstands, and they can scream and shout about it… that’s good; that’s what you want.
Every time I’ve been offered a new job, I’ve automatically said, ‘Oh, I don’t think you want me for that job.’ It’s sort of a weird female – or, at least, it is in me – a weird female defense, when, in fact, what you want to do is scream, ‘Hooray, I want to do this!’
‘The Wonder Years’ family was the kind where everything seemed to be bubbling and simmering with the occasional explosion. There were a lot of things that went unsaid in that family. In my family, everything is said – on the surface, you scream and yell about it, and three minutes later, you’re all friends.
As a child, I was always making sound; it was a compulsion. I loved to scream and yell and sing; it freed me from all the thoughts in my head. I begged for opera lessons because opera singing is the most formidable, most emotional way to use your voice.
A lot of people say they’re competitive, and they think that means they scream and yell when they lose. I’m not like that. I don’t scream and yell. I just win. At anything I do, I win.
My clients train hard. They don’t scream or throw weights – they just push hard, trying to get more out of themselves than their bodies want to give, trying to walk that terrible, beautiful line between controlled aggression and all-out insanity.
I have a raging temper. I’ll shout and scream, then it passes like a wicked storm.
In ‘Scream,’ there is very real drama that would be in almost any drama.
How can you have ‘Scream’ without Ghostface? It’s like ‘Friday the 13th’ without Jason.
‘Nightmare on Elm Street’ wasn’t that big. Over a long period of time it did very well, but this was different. ‘Scream’ didn’t have a strong first weekend, and it went down the second, but then it kept going up.
It’s rare to find someone excited over jury duty. If they’re out there, I’ve never met them. Not a one. When the summons for jury duty arrives in the mail, how many people scream, ‘Yes!’ and run to clear the calendar? None. Our first and only reaction is, ‘Oh, no,’ quickly followed by, ‘How can I get out of this?’
Alice Walker’s words have such rhythm and scream music.
My poor children have been the subject of all of my experiments. We’re still doing what I call ‘Amish summers’ where I turn off all electronics and pack away all their computers and stuff and watch them scream for a while until they settle down into, like, an electronic-free summer.
Some guys play so straight, and that may be their thing; like, a lot of guys are good playing like that. I can’t play like that. I have to flair out. I have to yell. I gotta scream. I gotta talk trash – that’s how I get myself going.
Scream was great for what it was. For a horror film, it was intelligent, it was funny, it took a laugh at itself.
What ‘Scream’ was great at was presenting ironic detachment and then making you actually care about the people that were having it, and juxtaposing it with their situation, all in the service of making a great horror movie. It was fresh.
While labour market reports scream with dramatic youth unemployment data, hundreds of employers cry out for employees with the right skills sets. As recruiters, we suffer this shortage every day.
I would say more power to women who scream from the rooftop about something wrong done to them, whether it is after 10 years or 20 or 50… It doesn’t make a difference.
I just have such a passion for artistic luxury items. I literally sometimes scream when it comes through the post for me.
I’m glad that I didn’t get a part in ‘Scream 2’ and become a star in 1995.
If I had a good scream, like Frank Black, I’d be doing punk music, ‘cos I love that.
Big shout out to Nas: if you want to scream my name out again and put my name in your rhyme, I think it’s funny. Let’s make some money from it. Just don’t take it so serious, man.
We’ve all been in that metaphoric place, having to scream out what you want in the face of your fears.
We have boys now, and men, in the rock and roll business and all the show business, who have this reaction on women. They scream. They yell. They do all sorts of wild things.
Look, I’m still a goateed guy with a bunch of tattoos, but I’ve got a poodle and not a pit bull. I don’t kick boxes and I don’t scream at other people.
If you’re going to scream and yell and pull a groin when calling a catch, you have to really make sure what you’re seeing is actually what’s happening.
As a child, I would go days without speaking, and then suddenly I would scream until everyone was looking at me.
It’s like when someone dunks… and they scream. It’s all part of the game.
There is mental as well as physical fatigue. You have to cry, scream, keep on repeating the same dialogue till you get it right.
The haters always scream the loudest.
I hold a lot of things in. I’m always making sure everybody is okay. I usually don’t rage; I usually don’t curse. So for me, it’s a great thing to be able to scream and say whatever I want.
I would love for my phone to scream if I am about to miss an important thing in my life and never bother me if I’m doing something very important and the information coming in is less important than what I’m doing.
It’s difficult for me to really temper my personality, but I am trying to be a little more sensible about it. If I really lose my temper, I go to my room and scream and shout, but I try not to lose it on people any more. I’ve never said something mean just like that. I’ve only said things in retaliation.
‘I don’t want to grow up’, Tom Waits said it. I live it. I put myself in a position to be a kid as long as I want to. I play loud music and scream for a living.
I’ve done a lot of shows over a long time, and I’ve lost my voice on plays before, and it’s because I’ve been thinking closely about what I’m doing with my voice. Babies can scream all day and never lose their voice because they just mean it. As long as you mean it, then it carries you through. It’s do it or don’t.
Golfers don’t scream. Golfers just adjust the pleats in their pants and go from there. That’s about as antagonistic as we get.
I took a semester off to film ‘Scream Queens,’ which was a great decision because it was an incredibly wild experience that did a lot for me as far as my career.