No man can be an agnostic who has a sense of humour.
I consider myself something of a raconteur. I have a rather audacious sense of humour.
Brits have a peculiar sense of humour. I love it.
Humour is the be-all and end-all medicine of human existence.
Politics has friendship, enmity, intrigue and even humour.
I prefer the finesse of French humour. English humour is more scathing, more cruel, as illustrated by Monty Python and Little Britain.
When synchronised swimming first appeared on TV, we laughed very heartily, and I, for one, applauded the decision to introduce humour into the Olympics.
The hall-mark of American humour is its pose of illiteracy.
Northern Irish people tend to have this sharp, dark sense of humour.
While it is entirely untrue that Canadians lack a sense of humour, the funniest ones tend to head south: Dan Aykroyd, Jim Carrey, Michael J. Fox.
At home I've got a very puerile, juvenile sense of humour.
I have a good sense of humour, and that's what kept me for the 30 years I was locked up.
The journalists have obviously failed to capture my innate magnetism, humour and charisma, and they all need to be fired from their newspapers right away.
Paul Verhoeven is one of my favourite directors. I love his ability to mash extreme violence with humour and satire.
My career is chequered. Then I think I got pigeon-holed in humour; Shakespeare is not my thing.
The great British public is renowned throughout the world for its sense of humour.
Humour has always been a self-defence mechanism for me.
Simon Pegg is terribly talented, very funny, such a delicious sense of humour.
I like doom and gloom with a sense of humour. Maybe it's a Scottish thing, we like to undercut indulgence with a laugh.
I love the Russians for their verve, their melancholia, their vivacity, their unpredictability, and their humour.