Mad, Bad and Dangerous to Know
Appearance
Mad, Bad, and Dangerous to Know was a phrase used by Lady Caroline Lamb to describe Lord Byron. It has since been used as follows:
- Mad, Bad, and Dangerous to Know (Dead or Alive album)
- Mad, Bad and Dangerous to Know (The Cross album)
- Mad, Bad and Dangerous to Know, an autobiography by Ranulph Fiennes
- "Mad, Bad & Dangerous to Know", a song by Blue Tears from Mad, Bad and Dangerous
- "They call me bad, Mad Caliban with manners, Dangerous to know", lines from The Byronic Man, a song by Cradle of Filth on the album Thornography.
See also
- The Mad, the Bad & the Dangerous, a tour and DVD by The Hamsters, The Wilko Johnson Band and John Otway
- Mad, Bad and Dangerous?: The Scientist and the Cinema, a book by Christopher Frayling
- A Mad, Bad, and Dangerous People?: England 1783-1846, book by Boyd Hilton