A critic once described me as an 'amiable beanpole.' I got it printed on a T-shirt.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
'The Squickerwonkers' was the story I wrote when I was on 'The Hobbit.' And I brought it to Comic-Con and sold out a thousand copies I had printed.
Critics established a snobbery toward me.
In school, I was a beanpole with a nose I hadn't grown into.
The critics had an image of me, and they wouldn't accept any other... I was a cartoon character. A joke.
I have a great T-shirt that I received at the New Jersey Hall of Fame when I was inducted. It says - it makes me choke up - it says, 'I'm a Jersey tomato'... I am. I am a Jersey girl and proud of it.
Criticism, that fine flower of personal expression in the garden of letters.
I'm very pleased with being a part of the Bean Pole family. It's a relationship that makes sense to me. I'm very pleased to have my name associated with Bean Pole Jeans.
In the first debate the bulges create the impression of a letter T with a small feature which appears similar to a wire under the jacket running upward from the right.
I was once described by one of my critics as an aesthetic fascist.
I went from being a beanpole - like a normal kid of the 1950s - and exploded. The weight piled on and didn't stop until into my adulthood.