I'm not a very assertive person.

I can't bear the idea or concept of being a 'celeb.'

I love live theatre, it's always thrilling and exciting.

The thing I simply hate about my job is any 'celeb' coverage.

John Cleese is a very fast worker and a highly disciplined one.

The Victorian Age was very stimulating, historically impressive.

My elder son and his wife keep bees, and my younger son has bees, too.

Contrary to popular belief, actors are extremely supportive of each other.

I don't like being recognised. Shopping, I often wear glasses and a scarf.

I grew up in a household that was very friendly towards the theatre and acting.

In my extreme youth I did a terrifying diet - drinking 40 cups of liquid a day.

My mother was originally from Yorkshire and I spent a lot of my childhood there.

I love long runs. I never feel ready to go till about the second Wednesday matinee.

I think protecting rural England is more important than any work I do as an actress.

My mother and father were lovely parents, always quite hard up, but very hard-working.

Being out of work is very depressing. But luckily I haven't been there for a long time.

It isn't often I get a part that enables me to play someone from the age of 13 up to 81.

I'm of a generation that doesn't expect automatic happiness, so I feel incredibly lucky.

The charming sitcom is all very well, but good comedy is based on pain and danger and fear.

Supermarkets must not eliminate the individual retailers and market roads like the Northcote.

I've got very little grey hair. It's to do with the genes. My mother and father were the same.

I have worked for Tesco and am grateful to them but in principle I believe in individual shops.

The people you learn most from are the audiences, which is why I'm always best on my last night.

I feel very grateful for Sybil. 'Fawlty Towers' was very hard to make, but it was very stimulating.

What is it about royalty - even if you're a confirmed republican - that is dramatically interesting?

I can't bear it when young actors do too much finger-wagging. It spoils the audience's concentration.

I always say I want to die on the eighth curtain call. Eight will mean the show's been rather a success.

Sometimes with good writers you don't spot the theme, but when you come away you realise there has been one.

When I had started commuting into London for theatre school, I'd had to sell my uncle's stamp collection for £300.

I'd love to play Constance in 'King John' or Paulina in 'The Winter's Tale.' I'd like to go on working till I drop.

I don't think theatrical marriages are necessarily less stable than others; I think this is a slight misapprehension.

Gertrude's Secret' is highly entertaining. Some of the monologues are very funny, some very surprising and some painful.

I think local shopping areas and markets are terribly important, both for tradespeople and the local feeling of an area.

I just think it's useful for people to know that even if you are off the telly you're just an ordinary person who uses the Tube.

A good actor just wants to deliver the writing to the audience who've paid that night. There's an agonising desire to get it right.

I got a job right out of drama school as assistant stage manager at the Bristol Old Vic. I've been lucky enough to stay in work ever since.

I've always been fascinated by dialects and accents. In fact, I've rarely played straight English parts. I play character parts - and always will.

I had quite a healthy childhood in the countryside, but I did have double pneumonia aged eight, and was one of the first patients to be given antibiotics.

When you watch some old sitcoms, however charming they are, they have often lost speed over the years. The speed of 'Fawlty Towers' has lasted the distance.

It doesn't matter what people think about you, so long as they get the play through your performance. Only a few not very good actors go in for self-advertisement.

When I was very young I was never pretty or beautiful and didn't get the chance to play many parts I'd have loved to tackle: the great Shakespearean parts - Viola, Helena.

It breaks my heart to hear of our theatres struggling to survive. As well as playing a vital role in community life, they're guardians of our heritage and should be cherished.

Hobson's Choice' may have been in black and white, but it was a David Lean production filmed at Shepperton with Charles Laughton in the lead. So it was a big film - and it felt like it.

In our profession if you've got an ugly mark or there's anything that cosmetic surgery can do for you I think it's absolutely fine. I would consider it, but I've been very lucky not to have to.

I shouldn't be surprised if John Cleese's scripts don't become set texts for examinations-they're classics. And I can't tell you how service in English hotels has improved since 'Fawlty Towers.'

Actors go into it because it gives us the chance to play people a great deal more interesting than we are, and to say things infinitely wittier and more intelligent than anything we could think of.

In 1954 I was on Broadway for five months in 'The Matchmaker' and went once a week to the classes of Uta Hagen, a theatrical guru whose teaching in retrospect illuminated the whole of my training at the Old Vic.

My very first school was a primary school in Surrey. I remember being taught to read by the traditional ABC, instead of look-say - that is, whole words at a time - which was fashionable when my children were at school.

It's strange how 'Fawlty' has become a perennial. I keep meeting new generations of schoolboys who know the lines better than I did when I said them. The program has sensational sales in video. I'm mercifully on a small percentage.

Dad was the generation that fought in both world wars, and people married rather later when they had been in the trenches. My mum was an actress and he saw her in a show in London and they married. She stopped acting when she had babies, which is a shame.

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