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Mara

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Post 09 Jan 2009, 23:05

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Some of the interviews she did are on Youtube, others are not, but let's talk about her appreacances on chat shows here!

My fave by far was the Friday Night Project with Jo as guest host, the combination of her, Alan and Justin was simply hilarious! :lol: (''You don't have to be posh to be priviliged Joanna!'') It's actually the first interview with her in it that I watched: the 'Really New Avengers' and the 'Ask Me Anything' parts were the absolute highlights.. (''A BUM?!")

Another fave of mine is the interview for French telly she did with Jennifer Saunders - the questions are bollocks, but the two of them handle it in such a funny and charming way..
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''Some of her roles belie quite how bright she is – she can run rings round people with one gentle smile!”
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Philippa

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Post 09 Jan 2009, 23:18

Re: Joanna's interviews

Oh how I love the Friday Night Project.
The show in itself is just fantastic, and to have Joanna as a guest host on there is just the ultimate combination :heart:

Another, more recent one that I like is the Al Murray interview. I frankly though Al Murray himself was a tit, but Joanna was so extremely charming and funny (as always guh), so even though I didn't like Al, it was still a pleasure to watch :grin:
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Mara

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Post 09 Jan 2009, 23:27

Re: Joanna's interviews

Have never seen that, I can not find it on Youtube either... Sounds good though!

Another fave is the Graham Norton - I usually watch his show anyway, it doesn't really depend on who the guests are, but Jo on the couch was lovely. I loved the bit were she explained how to step into your car in an elegant way and how to sit properly: very helpful, cheers Jo... :lol:
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Philippa

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Post 09 Jan 2009, 23:48

Re: Joanna's interviews

^Now all we need to do is find boyfriends with cars like that, otherwise it's completely useless information :lol:

Oh and another interview that I love is the one with Jo and Jen on Letterman. They're just completely in character and they stay that way throughout the interview which is just brilliant. The most amazing moment is when Jen throws the cigarettes all over the floor and Jo falls to the floor to collect them all. HILARIOUS :lolol: :rofl:
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Mara

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Post 10 Jan 2009, 00:00

Re: Joanna's interviews

Haha, yes we should! The Gambit/Steed kind of guy I prefer. (incl. car and good manners please)

The Letterman chat, haha! ''Sometimes just the hair comes, but not every piece of it..'' Poor Jennifer! :lol: I love it when she throws the ciggies onto the floor though, and Jo desperately tries to pick 'em up one by one.. That was great!
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''Some of her roles belie quite how bright she is – she can run rings round people with one gentle smile!”
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Mara

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Post 05 Jul 2009, 12:49

Random Joanna articles

The title speaks for itself... :wink:

Here's one from 2005:

Joanna Lumley - ABFAB Tips from TV's Poshest star and her "disgusting" alter ego

Champaigne or Chablis?

Champaigne every time - ideally at The Four Seasons in New York. But I also like red wine. The most drunk I've ever been was in Sicily with my husband Steven. We ordered two bottles of local red wine and were unconcious soon afterwards.

Earliest Holiday Memory?

Visiting Fraser's Hill in Malaysia, when I ws six. These days I like to hide away in our cottage deep in the scottish countryside.

Best Holiday Ever?

The island of Elba when I was 17. I loved Italian food and wine. But I've also some incredible experiences roughing it - in Pakistan. I slept under the stars on bare rocks in the Karakorums.

Any Travel Confessions?

Pretending I went to the Louvre, when it was actually closed.

Who's your favourite travelling companion?

Jennifer Saunders because she is slightly unstable and shops like a demented soul.

Would you travel with Patsy?

I do. She's the person I could have been if I hadn't turned out to be me. She's a figure of nostalgia, doing everything we darn't do now. I think people know the difference between us - but old Pats, with her disgusting habits and don't care attitude, is the one they hope to meet.

Whats her favourite hotel?

She's keen on George V in Paris - its so decadent. Mine is Hyde Park Mandarian Oriental.

Best place to shop?

I love the bustle and bargins you find in souks and bazaars. And I adore Harvey Nicks, of course

How do you look good after a long flight?

I put on a white T shirt and smile

Whats the most galmourous thing you've ever done?

Joined the likes of Audrey Hepburn, Princess Diana and Grace Kelly by naming a crusie ship. The ceremony for naming The Sea Princess was fanastic - espically when the champaigne bottle smashed. But the most decadent thing I've ever done was help set fire to a bar in downtown Manhattan.

Hot travel tip for the Next Year?

Be more daring and adventourous than you ever dreamed. Or as Patsy would put it " Don't question Me".


I get a slight feeling that they've literally copied parts from NRFS, but I do love some of her answers, haha.
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Philippa

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Post 05 Jul 2009, 13:26

Re: Random Joanna articles

Oh my that was brilliant :lolol:
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Mara

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Post 05 Jul 2009, 13:29

Re: Random Joanna articles

Can you make this a sticky, pretty please? ^^

I really loved the bit about her getting totally pissed on holiday and Jennifer Saunders: ''she shops like a demented soul''. Haha!
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''Some of her roles belie quite how bright she is – she can run rings round people with one gentle smile!”
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Philippa

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Post 05 Jul 2009, 13:37

Re: Random Joanna articles

How do you look good after a long flight?

I put on a white T shirt and smile



See that doesn't work for me :lolol:
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Mara

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Post 05 Jul 2009, 13:41

Re: Random Joanna articles

Aw, I feel your pain babe. Neither it does for me. :lol:
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Froggie

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Post 09 Jul 2009, 11:24

Re: Random Joanna articles

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Mara

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Post 09 Jul 2009, 11:55

Re: Random Joanna articles

“I’ve since had people queueing up to tell me that I don’t look as bad in real life as I did in the pictures.”

Auw. :lol:

Thanks Esther!
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Philippa

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Post 09 Jul 2009, 16:01

Re: Random Joanna articles

Ahaha how charming :lol:
And how dare these people accusing her of not looking good? Joanna ALWAYS looks good, and that's a fact!
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george123

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Post 30 Jul 2009, 23:06

Re: Random Joanna articles

Im loving this forum & am getting so much out of it that Im trying to find things in my collection that haven't been posted yet to give a little bit back. Its a very hard job as you guys have covered practically everything, but I don't think I've seen this article (below). I forget how I found it (I got lost in Google one day & it appeared), but its one of my favorites. If Im wrong & it has been posted before - then apologies!

HOW WE MET: JOANNA LUMLEY AND STEPHEN BARLOW

The actress Joanna Lumley, 48, was born in Kashmir. In the Seventies, she portrayed Purdey in The New Avengers; today she is best-known as Patsy in Absolutely Fabulous. She has been a Times columnist and she is a Fellow of the Royal Geographic Society. She has a son, James, aged 27. Stephen Barlow, 40, was an organ scholar at Cambridge and studied conducting at the Guildhall. He has worked with Scottish Opera, ENO and Opera North and is the new Artistic Director of Belfast Opera. He married Joanna Lumley in 1986. The couple live in central London.

JOANNA LUMLEY: I first heard about Stephen Barlow through the Armitages, who were great family friends in Kent. I often stayed with them when I was expecting my son, James, who was born nearby in Canterbury, and I returned after he was born to show the progress of the former bulge. Around the same time - it was in the late Sixties when I was about 21 - it was announced that St Clair Armitage was bringing his friend Stephen to lunch. I was very disappointed when he didn't turn up - which seems strange because these boys were only 13.
Stephen was already something of a legend - an exceptionally gifted and brilliant musician, but I never actually met him until St Clair's wedding in Dawlish about 10 years later. The darling family met me after a long train journey and we rushed to the church and there was Stephen in a tremendous rage because half the music hadn't turned up. He had long black hair, was scowling ferociously and slamming music about. We all humbly helped him, but I felt like I'd had a kind of electric shock; it wasn't a matter of falling instantly in love, it was the impact of a colossal shock, completely memorable.
A few weeks later I was telling the director John Caird how I'd met an incredible person, and it turned out he knew Stephen. He asked him to the opening of the play he was directing. Stephen seemed very glazed and unfocused and I thought how very grand and slightly sardonic he was; I didn't realise it was plain fear, but at the same time I understood that there was something more on the agenda. However, the next news I got was that he had married. I remember shocking the Armitages by saying petulantly: "How stupid, how ridiculous."
Over the years, there were Christmas cards, then he got back in touch when he was rehearsing nearby and we had tea or wine and just talked and talked. I was always terribly pleased to hear his voice on the Ansaphone and to see his writing on a card; he has instantly recognisable writing - it just flows across the page.
Then, in 1985, he asked Jamie and me to Glyndebourne. I was wearing a huge white Mexican dress and Jamie took a picture of us which looked just as if we were getting married, yet we were still only at the having tea stage.
Then Stephen asked me to an Opera 80 production in the Lake District. He was driving me back to a station to come back to work and I was whining on about things and he said something like, "Well, do you want to marry me?" He claims I said yes straight away, but I think I hesitated for a few moments. Then I sat in the train thinking, "Gosh, I'm going to get married to Stephen Barlow." There was a tremendous sense of relief, as if some huge journey had been accomplished. It seemed like one of those children's puzzles when you put shapes in holes, and at long last we'd got it right.
When we had decided to get married we were too squashed in my Holland Park flat, so we took a series of homes while Stephen waited for his divorce to come through. At one point, we practically ended up in debtor's prison, because we took out a bridging loan and then couldn't sell the house - it was a nightmare. My warning to everyone would be: never, ever take out a bridging loan. Now we live in central London. We work in separate areas of the house - Stephen has a music room, although the ceiling fell down on to the piano two weeks ago.
People often ask what we find to talk about, because musicians are considered so highbrow - people assume they can't talk about anything else. As far as an actress is concerned, a musician is certainly considered pretty senior service - they are the lite of the performing arts. However, we don't talk shop endlessly, and I'm glad to say I leave Patsy at the door.
I love going along to rehearsals to watch Stephen working. We hardly saw each other last year because of work. It was horrible. At one point we were on a 19-hour time difference. Thank God for the fax. That won't happen again; I'm about as ambitious as a dish of water, so next time I'll just chuck it all in and go with him.

STEPHEN BARLOW: I'd known about Joanna from the age of 13. My schoolfriend, St Clair Armitage at King's Canterbury, was always going on about this very glamorous friend of the family. As he lived very close to school he used to ask me to his house in Godmersham for Sunday lunch, usually promising that this ravishing creature would turn up. She never did.
I'd forgotten about her until St Clair's wedding in Dawlish. He invited me to play the organ, and I had been conducting The Rake's Progress the night before in Norwich and had to go on to work in Southampton the next day, so I arrived in a highly tired and emotional state. So bad, in fact, that I forgot to bring the music, which was Zadok the Priest and The Arrival of the Queen of Sheba.
I walked into the church and went into hysterical apologies and started to rummage through the church music library for the scores. Amidst this flurry was Jo, looking amazing in a turquoise coat. I'd never seen anything so glamorous and statuesque. I asked her to come to my rescue, which she did.
After the ceremony there was a reception followed by an all-night party. I was thinking I should go to bed, because I had a concert the next night, so I was looking rather glum when St Clair's sister told me Jo would like to talk to me. We talked about music and various things. She stood out like a beacon because she was such a beautiful and extraordinary woman, though I think she was feeling slightly out of it because St Clair's friends, including me, were seven or eight years younger than her.
The next time I saw her was at a first-night party for a play starring her friend Jane Carr. Jo turned up in a flashy black Renault 5 and it was very theatrical, and "darling" this and that, and I had grave doubts about whether I could cope. We went out to dinner afterwards, but then didn't see each other for a long time; we were both attached to other people. Then I went and got married to a singer and Jo and I didn't communicate except for Christmas cards.
But one day in about 1984 I was rehearsing with the Chelsea Opera Group in Addison Road and realised it was the street she lived in and left a note saying: "How's life?"
In 1985 I had the good idea of inviting her to Glyndebourne and she came with her son, James. She was wearing this huge, flouncing Mexican dress and Jamie was being very cool and very James Dean. We walked into a nearby pub and it was like being on a film set.
This tortuously long courtship finally got off the ground when I took her to the Lake District where I was conducting Opera 80. As we were driving back across the Pennines, I asked her to marry me. I was still married - although separated - so we had to wait for my divorce to come through and then as soon as possible after that, in October 1986, we got married in Scotland, where I was conducting.
The press had been hounding us and we were married in Fort William by a sweet lady who disguised our names on the list. The newspapers didn't catch up for three hours, by which time we were in Inverlochy Castle having our reception. They hovered over the place in a helicopter.
The press attention Jo has always attracted took of lot of getting used to. When we first met she was still being pursued for never naming Jamie's father. She always dealt with it with great charm but firmness. Jamie went through a tough time as well, but I don't think it harmed him. I'm getting more adept at not glowering in pictures, but some things do set me back. For instance, last year a tabloid paper said it would like to talk to me about Glyndebourne, but ran a piece saying I was fed up with being "Mr Lumley". That really depressed me. !
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george123

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Post 31 Jul 2009, 00:07

Re: Random Joanna articles

DOH! Should have put the above in quotes - sorry folks (I'm still learning)!
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Timeless A-Peel

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Post 31 Jul 2009, 04:18

Re: Random Joanna articles

What a lovely article! Thank you for sharing. It's so nice to get Stephen's perspective on it for a change--never hear much from him. That was a real treat. :grin:
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Philippa

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Post 31 Jul 2009, 08:43

Re: Random Joanna articles

That was lovely, thank you so much! Indeed really nice to get Stephen's perspective as well, since you normally never hear from him :grin:
Great find!
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Joris

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Post 31 Jul 2009, 09:36

Re: Random Joanna articles

Thanks for sharing it !
Don't move or...I call the New Avengers rightaway !
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Mara

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Post 31 Jul 2009, 13:18

Re: Random Joanna articles

Thanks for posting that! I would never have expected to hear both sides of the story, but it's nice for a change. :wink:
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george123

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Post 31 Aug 2009, 08:23

Re: Random Joanna articles

I just found an interesting Joanna mention in an article from The Guardian today. The article is about how the British Press invades peoples privacy & contains the following...

The actor Joanna Lumley was targeted repeatedly by news groups who were trying to uncover the identity of the father of her child. In one 18-month period, News International paid a total of £1,726 in five different invoices, apparently for printouts of phone numbers she had been dialling.


When Joanna had Jamie, it was a lot before my time, so I didn't experience the huge fuss that was made about it in the papers (its hard to imagine, in this day & age, that it was such an issue). What I find amazing is that, despite all the harassment she got because of it (such as the above) she doesn't seem to have any resentment about it.

I just thought this was an interesting illustration of how crazy her life was back then (& how strong she must be to have come through it so well). Although we all know that. Ha.

Whole article (for anyone interested) is here - but the only Joanna reference is the one above
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2009/aug/31/press-privacy-information-commmissioner
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Philippa

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Post 31 Aug 2009, 22:58

Re: Random Joanna articles

That is crazy and sickening. I really don't get why people are so obsessed with private details of someone's life. If someone doesn't want to share certain information with the whole world, people should respect that, and not try and dig for the answers :mad:
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Mara

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Post 31 Aug 2009, 23:00

Re: Random Joanna articles

I totally agree. And again, that just shows what a strong personality she's got, because she must have been so vunerable at that time...
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Joris

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Post 01 Sep 2009, 08:09

Re: Random Joanna articles

Wao, it really kills a life, I hate paparazzis. :no:
Good to know that Joanna overcame that !
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Mara

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Post 09 Sep 2009, 20:25

Re: Random Joanna articles

Apparently, Jo scored highly as the poshest celebrity, haha. here's the article. Now Jo I can fully understand, but Cheryl Cole?! She's the X-fact/Girls Aloud girl, right? I have my doubts...
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Mara

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Post 09 Jan 2010, 18:08

Re: Joanna's interviews

Here's an old interview I came across from the News Scotsman last year.

IF ACTORS shouldn't work with children or animals then after the events of last week, when Joanna Lumley ambushed the immigration minister on behalf of the Gurkhas, it's true to say the politicians shouldn't work with actors. Thespians are better orators and their foreheads don't gleam with quite so much sweat. Phil Woolas knows this now.
Woolas behaved like all short, bespectacled men when confronted by Lumley's glamour and conviction. He pushed his glasses up his nose and tried to look debonair. He wasn't fooling us and he wasn't fooling this committed campaigner on many issues, mosADVERTISEMENTt notably the rights of Gurkhas to live in Britain.

Westminster was his theatre, but Lumley had stormed the stage. As the photographers swarmed, waiting for the picture which would accompany the already written headlines of "Absolutely Farcical", she took up position one step above Woolas, all the better to look down on him through her blonde fringe with those inkwell eyes. Standing slightly behind the minister, she seemed to be working him from the back, or perhaps tweaking his bottom to ensure he said the right things. Already it's one of the snaps of the year.

Of course, not all thespians are as formidable as Joanna Lumley, an actress whose finest performances may well be as Joanna Lumley. At no time in her career has her CV been jam-packed with great roles. At two junctures, she's played iconic ones, and the second of them – everyone's favourite coke-snorting alcoholic, Patsy Stone in Absolutely Fabulous – confirmed her as a national treasure. National treasures don't have to work all the time. We're content having them around.

Last year she was involved in a project which was very Joanna Lumley: identifying iconic images of Britishness (herself not included, presumably). Discussing her preferences, she said: "I was brought up in the Far East. When I got off the troop ship the first things I saw and smelled were wild roses so they would have to be in there. I'm terribly taken by the countryside... shadows cast by deep woods. I love the autumn. I love Soho. I love villages and crowded corners of Edinburgh. I love markets, jumble, jumbly people, not frightening, horrible people pouring out of football matches, but darling jumble, you know?"

Darling jumble – isn't that Lumley? A passionate champion of the Gurkhas, Tibet, Burma, mental health, Comic Relief and cuddly animals everywhere but who retains the faint air of a flibbertigibbet. A St Trinians' old girl – the blonde sexpot troublemaker, a trailblazer in her experiments with boys and eyeliner – but who, more and more, sounds like the eccentric headmistress.

"The young ones don't do anything nowadays... it's pretty shaming if you can't sew," she remarked after being impressed by Norway's youth during another of last year's very-Joanna-Lumley projects, a TV travelogue on the Northern Lights. "Why can't our children sit round fires learning how to use knives to cut firewood rather than killing each other with them?"

Lumley, who has just turned 63, was born in Kashmir where her father was a major in the 6th Gurkha Rifles. Among the veterans she led to Westminster last week was 86-year-old Tul Bahadur Pun, who won the Victoria Cross in an action against Japanese machine-gunners in Burma which saved her dad's life. It was her mother who taught her how to make a good fire, and how to wash all over with a tin mug of water, and to love travel and throw herself into each new situation.

Her father's postings made her a child of the Orient. Aged nine she pitched up in "strange, cold, pale, misty" England and at boarding school kept mice in her knickers drawer. At 16 she failed the audition for RADA and went instead to a finishing school. Women adore Lumley and men are quite partial to her, too: for the hair and the legs, of course, but also that impossibly posh voice.

In the Swinging Sixties she was a model, and dangled from a balloon in ads for Nimble bread. She was a Bond girl, but her 007 was George Lazenby. She was a soap dolly bird, but her suitor was Coronation Street's Ken Barlow. Then she became Purdy in The New Avengers and suddenly all men fancied her, and every woman wanted her haircut.

In the Sixties she had a son (her only child) by photographer Michael Claydon but didn't marry him. In the Seventies she and her first husband, comedy writer Jeremy Lloyd, were together for only a year. The Eighties produced the marriage that has lasted – with conductor Stephen Barlow – but professionally those were her wilderness years until Ab Fab and Patsy, the preposterous, beehived, ageing, immature, nymphomaniacal fashionista with which Jennifer Saunders activated her dormant talent for outrageous comedy.

More recently, in dramas like Up In Town and Sensitive Skin, Lumley has enjoyed the kind of classy parts playing women of a certain age reflecting on life and loss that only come the way of national treasures. "I'm an old actress, I've been around for so long," she said last year – but might there be one more great role for her?

"Joanna Lumley for Prime Minister." It started as a joke, spread to Twitter and the blogs, and after her encounter with Phil Woolas, hardly seemed like the silliest idea there's ever been.

So what kind of PM would she be? Well, we'd be probably all be washing out of tin mugs and saving on other natural resources. There would be National Service ("I love the idea") and part of each day would be set aside for talking. She hates iPods – hates that no one listens to birdsong. She also loathes celebrity magazines so would close them down, along with all plastic surgery clinics.

There doesn't seem to be much room for Patsy-style decadence but if anyone could flog this manifesto it would be Lumley. Last Thursday the Government didn't actually change their position on the Gurkhas, but as Woolas stared at his feet he resembled the errant pupil about to be on the receiving end of the six of the best from the headmistress.

He should be so lucky.


Alright, so I can't sew properly. And her point is...? I bet she can't use the internet! :lol:
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''Some of her roles belie quite how bright she is – she can run rings round people with one gentle smile!”
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