So I regard my part in Genevieve as a real challenge.

After all, a job isn't worth doing unless you enjoy it.

I was a sickly child, contracting tuberculosis at the age of five.

I actually enjoy wearing the corsets required in some period films.

Until Genevieve I had tended towards the more dramatic type of role.

Well, I suppose that, in a sense, every screen role is a favourite with me.

I got a divorce eleven years later on the grounds of cruelty, which is still not easy in England.

But I had promised my husband never to accept another engagement. It was not a very happy time for me.

It was one of the marvellous feelings of the film, having the music going in your head while doing scenes.

The corsets I wore in The Railway Children are still in my undies drawer, a prized relic of my favourite film.

I had promised my husband never to accept another engagement. It was hard. It was not a very happy time for me.

I've had a very strange life. Whenever I've married, I've married for life. But things have gone desperately wrong.

But I think you could say my parts in Appointment In London and Gilbert and Sullivan were particularly interesting.

What a thrill it was to play opposite Maurice Evans in this brilliant, dazzling musical, based on the life of two of the greatest personalities in stage history.

Over my desk hangs a poster from The Railway Children that my husband had framed for me. It is so lovely to see the children smiling as they run down the railway track.

I looked at films as a career from necessity but all I have really wanted is my home and children. The two things just do not work out together when one has to leave home at 5.30 am in the morning to go to the studio.

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