I hate to predict something so negative, but I do think war is probably the way it will happen.
Unless we can change the way we view our relationships and work together towards the common, greater good of everyone, despite cultural, language, geographic, socio-economic barriers.
Universal laws and common markets would be a start in the right direction to unify rather than to divide us.
Yes, of course. Everyone does to a certain extent. My world is very special, and I will protect and defend it with all I got. It's precious and I am still working on it. It's like a painting in progress. The general idea is romance, idealism, the countryside, or nature and music. That romantic reality that's yet to be written includes a very special character and some stories that resonate with a great love and a gentleman in the true sense of the word, perhaps from a different era. I am working on it CS. Will keep you posted.
I've often sat down with people talking about a film I've been in, and they haven't realized I was in it. My own parents were very un-neurotic, so I never thought that I had to change enormously in order to become a parent. To be honest, my husband and my children are my best friends. Working in films, there are hundreds of odd moments. Appallingly, I hadn't thought about it one jot. I never daydreamed as a little girl of getting married and having children. I was as surprised to discover I was getting married as I was to discover I was up the duff. 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. 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 really love my food. My favorite thing is artichokes. I am not so much interested in desserts or chocolate, though. I also like to cook with my husband Damian. I think I was brought up with an innate sense of responsibility because my dad was in the Foreign Office where you were in somebody else's country, and you were aware of your behavior. And my mum worked for the NHS, so you were aware of your responsibility to your country. I love live performance and have huge admiration for people who can really do it. It's the same with music: I'll play a record and think that I'm not really into country or ragga. But, if it's live and the musicians are good, I'll listen to pretty much anything. I love dressing up. But I'm very low-maintenance; the week before an event, I'll choose something as quickly as possible and that's that. If I can do my own hair and make-up, even better. I like it to be fun. I love theater 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. I was very lucky. I left college, and Richard Eyre was in charge of the National Theater. I was offered the lead in 'The Seagull' with no experience and went on to do five plays there. If I were in politics, I'd make both left and right sit down and make good decisions about national health. It's a huge problem, and it is something we all should be part of. 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. 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. 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.' 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 realized then a fantasist had been born. What interests me about life most is people, and the why of the world. That's what theater looks at: it examines life, and gives it a cohesiveness that life doesn't have. 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! 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!
I would like to be a viking when it comes to pilaging for a very hot and new sports car like a Lamborghini for example. Would I club you over the head for one if I could get away with it?
RE: Good Cops