Bob Taylor and I playing brothers. And I was a Mexican bandit. And he was the sheriff of the town. And we loved each other. We loved each other very much.

Meaning of the quote

The quote describes a close friendship between two actors, even though they played opposing roles in a movie. One actor played a Mexican bandit, while the other played the sheriff of the town. Despite their character differences, the actors cared for each other deeply as friends. The quote highlights how acting can bring people together, even when their characters are at odds.

About Anthony Quinn

Anthony Quinn, an acclaimed American actor, was known for his passionate and earthy portrayals in critically acclaimed films such as La Strada, Zorba the Greek, and Lawrence of Arabia. He won two Academy Awards for Best Supporting Actor and was a seminal figure of Latin-American representation in Hollywood.

More about the author

More quotes from Anthony Quinn

I mean, you know, actors lives – you’re forgotten. Look at Barrymore, and look at all the great actors. They’re forgotten after awhile.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

I have a son in Barcelona whom I am madly in love with.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

I never satisfied that kid but I think he and I have made a deal now.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

And I loved Frank Lloyd Wright. I think he was the greatest man I have ever met in my life.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

I studied all about Gauguin. He was a banker. He was a banker who – he used to paint on Sundays. And one day he hated himself for painting on Sundays.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

I love the stage.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

Bob Taylor and I playing brothers. And I was a Mexican bandit. And he was the sheriff of the town. And we loved each other. We loved each other very much.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

Well, I mean, you have an emotion, you want to express it. You don’t just look in the camera and do it. You want to hide from the embarrassment of your brother saying you’re not allowed to come into my town.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

On the stage, you have to find truth, even if you have to lose the audience.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

I mean, a Mexican boy couldn’t be anything else but an Indian. And why did you take the name of Quinn, they used to say to me. Hey, you’re an Indian, so I played Indians.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

I have lived in a flurry of images, but I will go out in a freeze frame.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

I never get the girl. I wind up with a country instead.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

Thirteen, 13 children, and I love – I love them all. And I think I’ve been a good father to all of them.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

Well, I mean, bread, I mean, I’ve got to have bread too to live.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

Oh, the Irish were building the railroads down through Mexico, through Chihuahua. They finished the railroads when they finished out in the West Coast, and they went down and put the trains into Mexico.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

I lost my father was I 10 years old, and I always looked for a father. I missed my father very much.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

The painter leaves his mark. And I just put in two statues in Rhode Island that I’m working on. And I think that’s going to make me last longer than me.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

I liked sculpting better than painting. You have more freedom in sculpting.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

Now, Marlon and I – for some reason, even today – even today, we can’t say two words to each other. We really can’t talk to each other. You know, I say to him – Marlon can’t talk. I mean, he’d talk to you. But he can’t talk.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

No parent is there forever. So I won’t be here forever with these kids.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

Well, I called him and I said, Mr. Wright, what can I do? Universal offered me a contract $300 a week. He says take it. You’ll never get that money from me.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

First of all, I only get 50 percent of it, because, I mean, the galleries get 50 and 60 percent. I mean, that’s normal. I understand that. I don’t quarrel with that.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

I didn’t intend to become an actor.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

And I had known Peter O’Toole before in London. And I’d liked him very much. And the thought of being in a picture with him was very challenging to me. And he was playing the starring role.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)

In Europe an actor is an artist. In Hollywood, if he isn’t working, he’s a bum.

Anthony Quinn

Mexican-American actor (1915-2001)