“Shaw's plays are the price we pay for Shaw’s prefaces.”
James Agate (1877–1947) British diarist and critic
Ego, p. 276, March 10, 1933.
Fanny's First Play, Epilogue
1910s
“Shaw's plays are the price we pay for Shaw’s prefaces.”
James Agate (1877–1947) British diarist and critic
Ego, p. 276, March 10, 1933.
“Shaw's emotional development was one with his intellectual strength.”
Jacques Barzun (1907–2012) Historian
Source: Bernard Shaw in Twilight (1943), II
Context: Shaw's emotional development was one with his intellectual strength. His path led him into the thick of the scrimmage, where more spontaneous natures defend themselves with the usual weapons of malice, humility, bad temper or conceit. But Shaw used the death ray of imperturbability. His feelings were never hurt, his envy never aroused, his conceit was a transparent fiction, he never quarreled.
Jacques Barzun (1907–2012) Historian
Source: Bernard Shaw in Twilight (1943), II
Context: Shaw does not merely decorate a proposition, but makes his way from point to point through new and difficult territory.
This explains why Shaw must either be taken whole or left alone. He must be disassembled and put together again with nothing left out, under pain of incomprehension; for his politics, his art, and his religion — to say nothing of the shape of his sentences — are unique expressions of this enormously enlarged and yet concentrated consciousness.
J.B. Priestley (1894–1984) English writer
J. B. Priestley, "The War - And After", in Horizon magazine (January 1940), reprinted in War Decade : An Anthology of the 1940s (1989) by Andrew Sinclair
“I don't believe in morality. I'm a disciple of Bernard Shaw.”
George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950) Irish playwright
Act III
1910s, The Doctor's Dilemma (1911)
George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950) Irish playwright
Similar remarks are also attributed to Winston Churchill, Groucho Marx and to Mark Twain
Disputed
Malcolm Gladwell (1963) journalist and science writer
Source: David and Goliath: Underdogs, Misfits, and the Art of Battling Giants
“This is Cassidy Shaw, reporting to you live from the Barbur Bargain Motel in Southwest Portland.”
Lis Wiehl (1961) American legal scholar
Source: Heart of Ice A Triple Threat Novel with April Henry (Thomas Nelson), p. 215