My great-great-grandfather Julius founded the Communist Party in New York.
I went to college and studied theater; I went to a theater conservatory. I live in New York because I wanted to do plays and still do plays.
The aircraft that blew up the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon in Washington conveyed several messages to the world, of which one of the least remarked is this: the Muslims of the world are suffering.
My office in New York is overflowing with all kinds of cookbooks, and in New Orleans we have a huge culinary library. So yeah, I guess I'm a little bit obsessed.
My favorite teams are the Dallas Cowboys and the New York Jets.
It is ridiculous to set a detective story in New York City. New York City is itself a detective story.
New York is like a melting pot: so many different people, so many different cultures.
A trait which differentiated New York from European cities was the incredible freedom and ease in which life, including sexual life, could be carried on, on many levels.
A New York divorce is in itself a diploma of virtue.
If I'm able to get drafted by the New York Knicks, it would be a blessing.
I grew up in the Lower East Side of New York.
After a series of jobs that I prefer not to recall, I was hired in the early eighties as fashion editor of 'New York' magazine.
In Washington, no one believes anything unless it comes from 'The New Yorker,' 'New York Times' editorial page, or 'The Washington Post.'
I see a New York that is once again the empire state.
New York is, of course, many cities, and an exile does not return to the one he left.
New York is not conductive to theater. New York does not encourage its young. It does not encourage experimentation.
When I wrote 'The Good Fairies of New York,' I wasn't really imagining that there were fairies. Not in the way that I'm really imagining there are werewolves.
Totem poles and wooden masks no longer suggest tribal villages but fashionable drawing rooms in New York and Paris.
The 'New York Times' reviews of my work have been evenly divided - favourable and unfavourable.
One can't paint New York as it is, but rather as it is felt.