There's no way the future's over for Martin Keown, Tony Adams or David Seaman.
They [Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun] had their disagreements, it wasn't all sunshine and roses, but it isn't that way for any married couple.
[Adolf Hitler] was always intensely worried about security and people watching or being nosy, intruding on his private life.
[Adolf Hitler] was very close-mouthed, he was the most private individual I have ever seen, very secretive.
It would have been inconceivable that Eva [Braun] would ever have criticized [Adolf Hitler] to me. To his face? Yes, she would, but to me or anybody in our family? Never. And woe to anybody who dared criticize him to her.
I wish I had [letters], can you imagine their value, and I don't mean merely financially. I am sure they were accidentally destroyed or that Schaub found them and destroyed them. [Adolf] Hitler didn't want those letters read by anyone but Eva [Braun] and had made that point clear in the course of the years.
After [Adolf] Hitler took power, Hoffmann moved to a grander place on the Ebersbergerstrasse. I never saw the first house, I was never there. It was at the Schnorrstrasse that Eva [Braun] and he first really got to know each other. Some of this was before Geli Raubal's death, much of it was after that event.
Pretend you're mine," he urged, his arms closing around her. "Just for a minute. Pretend there's never been anyone but me, that I'm the one you're promised to. Do it for me. . . . I'll never ask again.
I keep telling people that the secret of their success is discovered in their daily agenda. What they do daily is going to determine their success.
It is good to be the possessor of some mountain-top experience.
Love. . . Just Nature's way of getting one person to pay the bills for another person.