Lock and load. Man shows up at the pearly gates, sees this guy in a pinstripe suit and a briefcase, a cigar, prancing about. When the pilgrims landed, first thing they did was eat a few Indians. What if I drop dead one day? You never got that last tonsil brushing. I merely asked her to sleep with me. There's nothing there. Personality… confident, crude, irreverent, and stubborn.
Denny Crane elicits either love or hatred from everyone he meets — no one is left without an opinion. Denny Crane is flexible with his principles when it comes to representing clients, but is firmly committed to his scruples in his private life.
The ruthless attorneys almost always win their cases. This is partly because they arewell-informed, willing to use illicit means to gain access to information they need. Search Charactour. Denny Crane : [walking through a crowd of reporters] dennycranelaw.
Pictures, bios, hobbies. I once captained my own spaceship. Mark Harrison : Yes. Denny Crane : Did he tell you that, ah, there could be side effects? Denny Crane : You were fully informed. Mark Harrison : I was. Denny Crane : You consented. Mark Harrison : I did.
Denny Crane : Take it again? Mark Harrison : Absolutely. Denny Crane : Like the doctor? Mark Harrison : Love him. Denny Crane : How's your memory? Mark Harrison : My memory's fine. Denny Crane : What's my name?
Mark Harrison : Denny Crane. Denny Crane : Like you mean it! Mark Harrison : Denny Crane! Mark Harrison : [shouts] Denny Crane! Denny Crane : No further questions. Denny Crane : You're one of those environmental lawyers?
Peter Barrett : Is there something wrong with that? Denny Crane : They're evildoers. Yesterday it's a tree, today it's a salmon, tomorrow it's, "Let's not dig up Alaska for oil because it's too pretty.
Alan Shore : All reality, none of it scripted. Denny Crane : Interesting. Alan Shore : They call them cling ons. Denny Crane : Did you say Klingons? Denny Crane : [while shaking hands] Denny Crane. Donny Crane : Donny Crane. Denny Crane : Denny Crane. Denny Crane : You left me, Shirley. Women don't leave Denny Crane. And for a secretary! Shirley Schmidt : It was the Secretary of Defense. Denny Crane : I don't know whether you know this but not many men take the time, every day, to have a cigar, glass of scotch, to talk to their best friend.
That's not something most men have. Alan Shore : No it isn't. I like to think that what you give to me you do with nobody else. Now that may sound silly to you. But here's what I think is silly, the idea that jealousy or fidelity is reserved for romance.
I always suspected that there was a connection between you and that man. That you got something you didn't get from me. Alan Shore : I probably do. But gosh, what I get from you, Denny. People walk around today calling everyone their best friend. The term doesn't have any real meaning anymore. Mere acquaintances are lavished with hugs and kisses upon a second or at most third meeting, birthday cards get passed around offices so everybody can scribble a snippet of sentimentality for a colleague they barely met, and everyone just loves everyone.
Refusing to believe in his own frailty, he instead refers to it as Mad Cow Disease. Many of the episodes prominently featuring Denny Crane focus on how he has become a parody of himself. However, an emphasis of his character remains his base humanity and desire to be loved, and his personal knowledge of his eccentricity as, at root, a facade.
His best friend in the show, Alan Shore , serves as a reality check for himself and for the audience, as a serious foil to his status as a comic relief character. Denny Crane From Conservapedia.
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