I was a real art freak when I was a teenager.

It's what people create that makes my heart stop.

What really matters to me is what my peers think.

Working in films, there are hundreds of odd moments.

A script is only as good as the director who's making it.

To be honest, my husband and my children are my best friends.

What I find most interesting about acting is transforming myself.

I love London, and it's a privilege for my children to grow up here.

Every time, at any point of my life, I think now is always the best age to be.

I've become more confident as I have got older. I care less what others think.

I think change is good because it teaches you that it's nothing to be frightened of.

If you're constantly frightened of being unhappy, how bloody exhausting must that be?

As I've got older, I feel more confident in my body, so wouldn't want to tamper with it.

I listen to Radio 4 all the time. I didn't go to university, so that's my further education.

I used to say that theatre was my favourite thing. But the more I do film, the more I appreciate it.

I feel as though my life is bathed in golden sunlight. And the really wonderful thing is that I know it.

I've often sat down with people talking about a film I've been in, and they haven't realised I was in it.

I've often sat down with people talking about a film I've been in, and they haven't realized I was in it.

So often when you meet child actors, they're weird - they're freaks. No, I mean it, they're really odd people.

My own parents were very un-neurotic, so I never thought that I had to change enormously in order to become a parent.

I can sleep anywhere! I can come off stage during the interval of a play, lie down for four minutes then wake up feeling better.

Theatre is liberating because it only works if it's truthful, That's what it requires. That's not true of film: the camera does lie.

Actually, I'm looking forward to being 50. Because to me, that's when a woman is at the pinnacle of her femininity and her womanhood.

Theatre is liberating because it only works if it's truthful - that's what it requires. That's not true of film: the camera does lie.

People are not considerate of others. They tend not to consider themselves as all living together, but see themselves only as individuals.

I'm a very positive person. My grandmother taught me that happiness is both a skill and a decision, and you are responsible for the outcome.

I think it's very important not to grow up with the unhealthy amount of attention that is sometimes put on people because they are 'actors'.

America is such a nation of suppressed emotion, and when you arrive in L.A., you can smell the fear. It's the most alien country I've ever been to.

I spent my teenage years in Paris when my dad was stationed there, and I'd look at women in their forties and think, 'That's the age I want to be.'

I was lucky to learn early in life that you need money for food and shelter, but there's no ambition in having money in the bank for the sake of it!

I had a great start in television; the first thing I did was an episode of Performance called The Entertainer with Michael Gambon playing Archie Rice.

I love theatre because it's just me and the audience. It's the litmus test in acting, to be able to sustain a performance over one, two or three hours.

There are a lot of little lessons that can be taught around the home without sitting a child down and boring them to death with your philosophy of life!

Childhood has definitely been invented, hasn't it? I think that's because people had children later, and we appreciate and cherish childhood a lot more.

The benefits of feminism for someone like my husband are fantastic. He can stay at home with the kids, he can take them to a park, he does the school run.

I had a great start in television; the first thing I did was an episode of 'Performance' called 'The Entertainer' with Michael Gambon playing Archie Rice.

If you think you are beautiful in a scene, you will come across as beautiful. I don't think looks are important; I think what's important is if someone is sexy.

I really love my food. My favourite thing is artichokes. I am not so much interested in desserts or chocolate, though. I also like to cook with my husband Damian.

I use my awards as doorsteps. Others are in the office or in little cubbyholes in our library – they go between the books, because they actually look like arty pieces

The only time I ever spend alone is when I am working or when my husband is away filming. I put the kids to bed and have an hour and a half in the evening for myself.

I use my awards as doorstops. Others are in the office or in little cubbyholes in our library - they go between the books, because they actually look like arty pieces.

You can be moved by a performance on set, but when you see it on screen, it does nothing. Yet there will be someone you simply didn't notice on set that on screen: bam!

What interests me about life most is people, and the why of the world. That's what theatre looks at: it examines life, and gives it a cohesiveness that life doesn't have.

Literature is reflecting what is happening in life. More and more women are having relationships with younger men. It's partly that women are not losing their figures now.

A perfect weekend in London has to start on Friday night, by going to the theatre, the Donmar or the National. It's a cliche for an actor, but I enjoy going as much as possible.

I'm half Scottish, half Welsh and I regard red hair as perfectly ordinary. And to set the record straight, contrary to reports, he has never referred to himself as the 'Ginger Ninja'.

You don't learn from good people - they've found what works for them and are completely original; you learn from the people who are bad. You think: 'Oh dear, I'm not going to do that.'

I was very lucky. I left college, and Richard Eyre was in charge of the National Theatre. I was offered the lead in 'The Seagull' with no experience and went on to do five plays there.

When I was 14 I told my mother I intended to be in the House of Commons in the morning, in court in the afternoon and on stage in the evening. She realised then a fantasist had been born.

When I was 14, I told my mother I intended to be in the House of Commons in the morning, in court in the afternoon and on stage in the evening. She realised then a fantasist had been born.

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