Will Quote #516

Quote from Will in Those Were the Days

Will: I still can't believe they fired the best teacher that Bel-Air Prep ever had.
Marge: You know, you been talking about this for the past two days. Move on it. You know what Malcolm said: "By any means necessary."
Will: Yeah, you know, Marge, you're right. I'm gonna move on it.
Marge: Good.
Will: I like having you around. You get me all hyped and everything. Hey, I bet that's how you felt when you roomed with Angela Davis, right?
Marge: Ooh, yeah. But we had a lot of huge arguments.
Will: Word? What? About her political views?
Marge: No, about how she used to always put her name on everything in the refrigerator. Got on my nerves.
Will: Yeah, and I bet with that big old Afro, she probably had a lot of hair and Afro Sheen and stuff all over the place, right?
Marge: Boy, don't get me started.

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 ‘Those Were the Days’ Quotes

Quote from Philip

Marge: Looks like I've had quite an impact on your kids.
Philip: You're proud of getting a high school kid suspended?
Marge: If you mean, am I proud to have told him to do anything you have to for what you believe in then, yes, I am.
Vivian: Marge, when you talked to Will about when we chained ourselves together at sit-ins, you're only giving him the romantic part of the struggle. Girlfriend, you are leaving out everything that went before it. The leaflets, the petitions, the years of trying to work through the system.
Marge: If the system doesn't work, you have to blow the door down. Looks like you forgot that.
Philip: You talk as if I wasn't there with you in Birmingham facing dogs and fire hoses. This is me, Olifami. The same Olifami that was with you the night Harlem went up in flames. But now I have a family and I choose not to fight in the streets. I have an office to fight from and I have fought and won cases for fair housing, affirmative action, health care, and I am not ashamed to write a big fat check for something I believe in and that doesn't make me any less committed than you. So don't you dare look down your damn nose at me, Adibola.

Quote from Will

Will: Yo, I'm gonna go with you. Man, if we gonna be underground, though, I'll probably need another name. How about, Akbar Shabash Jenkins?
Marge: Will, you're a kid. You belong at home. You're only 17.
Will: Oh, by the time you were 17, you burned your first bra.
Marge: Baby, you can't do what I did.
Will: But I could go get one of Hilary's.
Marge: What I mean is, you have to find your own way, Will. You know, when I was your age there weren't many doors open to us. Some of them we had to blow open, and because we did you've got more opportunities. Now, don't get me wrong. I am not saying that things are perfect. lt's just that now you can fight our battles in the boardrooms, too. And in the classrooms, the voting booths, and the courtrooms. Just like your uncle.
Will: All right, hold it. I thought you said "by any means necessary."
Marge: Right, but it's up to you to figure out what's necessary. And, Will, when the courtroom doesn't work, come find me.
Will: You're a deep sister, Adibola.
Marge: And you are the future, Hasani.

Quote from Philip

Philip: Marjorie Smallwood is a very close personal friend of mine. I consider myself privileged to know her. She was here, but she left some time this afternoon.
Agent Collins: Do you have any idea where she was headed?
Philip: As a matter of fact, she said she was going to a nuclear power plant in Texas. But then again, she did mention a migrant workers' camp in Salinas.
Vivian: No, honey, she said she was going to a voters' registration drive in Biloxi.
Hilary: Well, I thought she was just going to Saks.
Will: Oh, get the heck out of here. You all mean she ain't in the bathroom?
Agent Collins: I must say, I'm disappointed in you, Mr. Banks. I would have thought a man in your position would be more aware of his responsibilities.
Philip: I know exactly what my responsibilities are. Son, would you show Agent Collins to the door?
Carlton: By the way, I don't think we've met. Ricky Ricardo.