He broke Ty's record for career hits in September 1985 | 58 |
He built and sold theremins before inventing his namesake instrument | 68 |
He called his art "hand-painted dream photographs" | 60 |
He called his critics "pusillanimous pussyfooters" | 60 |
He called jealousy "the green-eyed monster" | 53 |
He called the U.S. pres. a "glorified public relations man" | 69 |
He came back to "The Tonight Show" in March | 53 |
He can sometimes be found near Wenda or Wizard Whitebeard | 57 |
He choreographed "Revelations" to spirituals | 54 |
He claimed the coast of California for Queen Elizabeth | 54 |
He co-founded the film studio American Zoetrope with Coppola | 60 |
He co-wrote "Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark" | 53 |
He coached Notre Dame's "Four Horsemen" | 53 |
He coined the phrase "The Canadian genius for compromise " | 68 |
He completed the Gate of All Nations in the Persepolis | 54 |
He composed "the Microsoft Sound" on a Mac | 52 |
He conducted the world premiere of "Pagliacci" | 56 |
He could "float like a butterfly, sting like a bee" | 61 |
He cowrote "Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire" | 57 |
He danced with his wife in Broadway's "Watch Your Step" | 69 |
He defeated Connors for the 1975 Wimbledon championship | 55 |
He designed a deck of cards based on "La Traviata" | 60 |
He designed a shirt, but wound up with a vest because he __ | 59 |
He designed costumes for Sarah Bernhardt and Anna Pavlova | 57 |
He developed the "Three Principles of the People" | 59 |
He did the #4 hit of 1974 "The Bitch Is Back" | 55 |
He didn't really cry "The British are coming!" | 60 |
He dies in Darnay's place in "A Tale of Two Cities" | 65 |
He directed Bela Lugosi in "Bride of the Monster" | 59 |
He directed Eastwood in the "Man with No Name" trilogy | 64 |
He directed Heath and Jake in "Brokeback Mountain" | 60 |
He directed Redd in "Cotton Comes to Harlem" | 54 |
He doubted God's ability to bring water out of a rock | 57 |
He entered the ring to ''Pomp and Circumstance'' | 64 |
He famously asked "Why didn't you burn the tapes?" | 64 |
He fell in love with a fire hydrant on "Sesame Street" | 64 |
He first saw his signature hairstyle in National Geographic | 59 |
He fled down the Mississippi with a runaway slave, in fiction | 61 |
He gave Lisa noogies in a "Saturday Night Live" sketch | 64 |
He got 8 electoral votes to Franklin's 523 in 1936 | 54 |
He had a #4 hit with "It's Time to Cry" | 53 |
He had a 1967 hit with "My Cup Runneth Over" | 54 |
He had a 2004 #1 hit "Drop It Like It's Hot" | 58 |
He had a hit with "The Joint Is Jumpin'" | 54 |
He had a thing for Trinity in "The Matrix" | 52 |
He had a whole family of musical instruments named after him | 60 |
He had the 1994 #1 hit "Here Comes the Hotstepper" | 60 |
He had the first hip-hop album to bear an explicit content sticker | 66 |
He had the title role in "Thank You, Jeeves" | 54 |
He hit the last two home runs at Ebbets Field [fist] | 52 |
He hosted a reality show called "I Pity the Fool" | 59 |
He hosted the first episode of "Saturday Night Live" | 62 |
He infamously said ''I'm in charge'' | 56 |
He interviewed Miles Davis in the first Playboy interview | 57 |
He introduced the Easter egg roll on the White House lawn | 57 |
He introduced the symbol "e" for natural logs | 55 |
He is "more an antique Roman than a Dane," in literature | 66 |
He joined Pizarro in the conquest of the Inca Empire | 52 |
He killed Anne Francis in "Bad Day at Black Rock" | 59 |
He killed Anthony Quinn in "Against All Flags" | 56 |
He killed Basil Rathbone in "The Mark of Zorro" | 57 |
He killed Chuck Norris in "Return of the Dragon" | 58 |
He kills Dumbledore (oh, stop whining about the spoiler) | 56 |
He knocked out Liston in the first round on May 25, 1965 | 56 |
He launched his business just a few years after Kroc | 52 |
He led the band on "Weasels Ripped My Flesh" | 54 |
He led the Chicago Symphony and the London Philharmonic | 55 |
He looked at her closely, then asked "...?" | 53 |
He lost a 1989 fight to Hector "Macho" Camacho | 56 |
He lost out to Forman for the 1984 Best Director Golden Globe | 61 |
He lost out to Philip Seymour Hoffman for Best Actor of 2005 | 60 |
He lowered the New York Times' price from 3¢ to 1¢ | 60 |
He made a big hit with a tomahawk on "The Tonight Show" | 65 |
He managed the U.S. to its first Olympic gold in baseball | 57 |
He may shout "you're not my real mom!" | 52 |
He might "report to the lobby" the same time as you | 61 |
He might have described himself as a coated knowledge professor | 63 |
He might have said "Thank goodness it's Friday" | 61 |
He often wears a brown porkpie and a red-and-white polka-dot necktie | 68 |
He once boasted he would become a millionaire by age 30 | 55 |
He originated the line "Bury my heart at Wounded Knee" | 64 |
He painted "Mustache Watch" and "Mustache Hat" | 66 |
He passed Lou in 2009 to become the Yankees' all-time hit leader | 68 |
He played "that Tod" in "Parenthood" | 56 |
He played a chauvinistic shoe salesman for ten years | 52 |
He played all 44 of his World Series games against the Yankees | 62 |
He played an attendant at Wally's Filling Station in 1960s TV | 65 |
He played Archer Maggott in "The Dirty Dozen" | 55 |
He played Arnold Vinick on "The West Wing" | 52 |
He played Austin Powers's father in "Goldmember" | 62 |
He played Brutus in "Julius Caesar" (1953) | 52 |
He played Calvera in "The Magnificent Seven" | 54 |
He played Cardinal Richelieu in "The Musketeer" | 57 |
He played Casey Kelso on "That '70s Show" | 55 |
He played Chris in "The Magnificent Seven" | 52 |
He played Darrin on "Bewitched," but came out much later | 66 |
He played Davidson's love interest in "The Crying Game" | 69 |
He played Dillinger in "Public Enemies" (2009) | 56 |
He played Don Altobello in "The Godfather Part III" | 61 |
He played Fiorello in "A Night at the Opera" | 54 |