I don't think we should ever be at war. That's kind of naive, I suppose.
I just talk, and I guess some of my views came out.
I would rather work less and do the things that I really want to do.
If someone is expressing everything I am feeling at the moment, it's probably Jon Stewart. I hear him and think, Yeah!
Right now we're in the middle of a cultural war between the Muslims and the Western world. The politicians get in the way, but if you put two people together in a room, they can talk it out and work it out, just like Anna and the King.
We've been raised to compete, to want more! More! More! It's a way of life. It's about greed.
Work hard, earn a great living, get whatever you want out of life, have all the stuff you want. But there should be a ceiling on it-enough is enough!
Sandy Duncan was a past recipient of the National Rehabilitation Hospital Victory Award, given to individuals who best exemplify exceptional strength and courage in the face of adversity.
Sandy Duncan graduated with a degree in Fine Arts from Lon Morris College in Jacksonville, Texas.
Sandy Duncan is currently married to Tony Award-nominated performer Don Correia, and the couple have two sons.
In 1970, the town of Taylorville, Illinois named a street "Sandy Duncan Drive" and Sandy Duncan appeared at the naming ceremony.
In 1971, Sandy Duncan discovered that she had a tumor on her optic nerve and after having surgery to remove it, she permanently lost vision in one eye.
Sandy Duncan made her stage debut in Dallas, TX at age 12 in a production of The King and I.
Sandy Duncan also "appeared" as an animated guest star on The New Scooby Doo Comedy Movies. The first season of the show began on September 9, 1972 and was entitled, Scooby Doo meets Sandy Duncan (Sandy Duncan's Jekyll and Hydes).