David Bowie credited as playing...
Self
- [last lines]
- Interviewer: And legacy. What? How would you like your legacy written?
- David Bowie, Himself: I'd love people to believe I really had great haircuts.
- David Bowie, Himself: Always remember that the reason that you initially started working was that there was something inside yourself that you felt that if you can manifest it in some way, you would understand more about yourself and how you co-exist with the rest of society.
- David Bowie, Himself: People either really accepted what I do or they absolutely sort of push it away from them. I guess that's what I am, you know. But, I would love to feel that what I did actually changed the fabric of music.
- David Bowie, Himself: Even though I seemed to superficially change such a lot, that a style does come through.
- David Bowie, Himself: By virtue of the fact that I'm getting older, its given me quite a scope of what I can draw from within my own catalog of albums.
- David Bowie, Himself: I had this poetic, romantic, kind of juvenile idea that I would be dead by 30, suddenly your 30, your 40, then your 50 and 57 and all that and its a new land, you know, a pioneer.
- David Bowie, Himself: I'm not really very keen to put on much of a theatrical show, you know, in terms of big sets and elephants and fireworks and things like that. Of course, it doesn't mean that I won't go back on my word; because that's, you know, part and parcel of what I do for you. Its part of my entertaining factor - is lying to you.
- David Bowie, Himself: I'm much more interested in the process of life and what is it that we're uncovering with our every move. The celebrity side of it, I couldn't give a bad sausage.
- David Bowie, Himself: It took me all the 60s to try to do everything that I would think of, to find out exactly what it was I wanted to do anyway. But, just about the end of the 60s, it just started to come together.
- David Bowie, Himself: Through circumstances I'd run into a drummer called John Cambridge and Toni Visconti and Mick Ronson and we put together a band called Hype. It was probably my first costume band. As far as I'm aware, that was the very first, so-called, glam rock gig.
- David Bowie, Himself: I was always a quite shy kid and I didn't come alive on stage. I just got even shyer. But, I found I didn't get so shy if I sort of adopted a character. So, it was a convenience - as well as a very bright theatrical idea. Ha ha.
- David Bowie, Himself: I'm not content to be just a rock-n-roll star all my life. I am trying to be one at the moment because I need it for a particular reason: so that I can get off and do other things.
- David Bowie, Himself: You know that feeling you get in the car when somebody accelerates very, very fast and you're not driving. You get that thing in the chest when you're being forced backwards and you think, "Oh", and you're not sure if you like it or not. It's that kind of feeling. That's what success was like. The first thrust of being totally unknown into being what seemed to be very quickly known. It was very frightening for me.
- David Bowie, Himself: Berlin. This was the first freedom I'd had. All those so-called trappings of celebrity and my own problems. Really, I'm quite fond of that freedom that it gave me.
- David Bowie, Himself: I put myself in a very anonymous situation in a quite working class part of Berlin. A Turkish area. And started to live a different life. I tried to distance myself from the very drug oriented lifestyle that I'd been leading.
- David Bowie, Himself: It was just a tremendous place to be and the music was some of the most rewarding for me, as an artist, in my life.
- [singing]
- David Bowie, Himself: I, I will be king, And you, you will be queen, Nothing will drive them away, We can beat them, For ever and ever, We can be heroes, Just for one day, I, I can remember, Standing by the wall...
- David Bowie, Himself: Her name was Hermione Farthingale and I absolutely adored her. I mean, she was the real first love in my life. She was a ballet dancer and a very good little singer. And she played a little bit of bed sitting room guitar. You know, that kind of folk guitar that every girl could look beautiful playing. I don't know why, but, all the beautiful girls could play a little bit of acoustic guitar. She was doing a film called "Song of Norway" and she fell in love with one of the actors on on it and she left me for him. Gone! I didn't get over that for such a long time. It really broke me up.