When I got started, I was a sideshow. At my first Consumer Electronics Show, in 1977 in Chicago, people came from all over the floor to see the 'lady programmer.' They had me dressed in a turquoise lab coat with my name embroidered on the pocket.
The first lady is, and always has been, an unpaid public servant elected by one person, her husband.
The First Lady is an unpaid public servant elected by one person - her husband.
Being first lady is the hardest unpaid job in the world.
I didn't hang around films. I don't know if I'd ever seen Hitchcock's The Lady Vanishes.
There is not so variable a thing in nature as a lady's head-dress.
Not so very long ago, certainly well into the Thirties, a lady companion was a normal feature of life for widows or lone spinsters.
As the 1960s began, a new breed of Hollywood leading lady was emerging. She was elegant, international, and wonderfully comedic.
I was supposed to be a romancer, either wooing the leading lady or competing with the leading man for her.
I have so much more to go through as a young lady. But oh my God. I feel like I can do anything.
I became a Republican when a very wise young lady asked me how I could remain a Democrat when I didn't agree with what they stood for and did agree with what the Republicans supported.
I realized that I'm a soft person. I think I'm sensitive. I wanted very much to be tough and I think movie stars have a certain kind of resilience and toughness to them, but I'm quite a sensitive young lady in some respects.
When a young man complains that a young lady has no heart, it's pretty certain that she has his.
In the world today, a young lady who does not have a college education just is not educated.
When I was a young lady, I never fantasized about getting married.
I had met a young lady who wanted to be in the theater. It was Judy Holliday. She had somehow fallen down the steps of the Village Vanguard, which still exists today.