I think performers are all show-offs anyway, especially musicians. Unless you show off, you're not going to get noticed.
The climate in the '50s and '60s for black performers or black people in the entertainment business was atrocious. It was atrocious.
Unfortunately, the spouses of performers have a terrible, terrible life. They get shunted aside, pushed aside, ignored.
Jimmy Snuka was one of the great performers in the business. In ring performance wise he was phenomenal.
To others we are not ourselves but performers in their lives cast for a part we do not even know we are playing.
Nowadays, performers worry too much about how they look. They're not concerned about what they're really saying to their audience.
Veteran performers are dying off, and new acts simply aren't emerging on the national scene.
We have some of the best in-ring performers in the world, but they are also some of the best characters.
Kids listen to performers and we have a duty to give them certain critical information.
There are a lot of bands and performers whose careers are permanently derailed by spectacularly bad management.
Most performers are used to the highs and the lows. If you can let a low stop you, that would be a sad commentary.
Performers often can be quite socially inept, you know? And even great comedians are like that.