WOMAN'S WAY

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The Fabulous Joanna Lumley

Joanna Lumley on encounters with the Queen and why she looks great at 75 – the Ab Fab star talks about doing more comedy with Jennifer Saunders and why she’s not planning to retire any time soon.

Joanna Lumley at the BAFTAS

It’s hard to believe Joanna Lumley has turned 75 this year when we meet on Zoom, her bright eyes, huge smile and youthful get-up-and-go attitude shining through.

But when asked how she stays so young looking, she brings her face closer, pulling both cheeks back with her hands, as if she’s demonstrating some over-the-top facelift, and says it’s lashings of make-up and good lighting. “I’ve been a vegetarian for more than 40 years and I’m never ill,” she adds. “The diet I love best is: eat stuff, mostly vegetables, not too much. And exercise? I have a tall, thin house and I run up and down the stairs a lot!”

Typically self-deprecating, swishing away compliments with elegant aplomb, part of Lumley’s charm is that she is really good at focusing on others, remembering people’s names, not a sniff of an ego in sight. If she hadn’t had an interview today she’d probably be wearing her gardening gear, she remarks.

Indeed, the former model has been described as a national treasure – an accolade which fills her with equal measures of sheer delight and disbelief – having appeared on our screens for so many decades, from Purdey in The New

Avengers with that androgynous haircut of the 70s, to the beehived magazine diva Patsy Stone in Absolutely Fabulous. She doubts if there will be any more Ab Fab, though. “I don’t think Jennifer (Saunders) and I will stop working together. We are always talking about what we might do together, but I don’t think it will be Ab Fab. Secretly, it’s quite sensible of her – because she’s the writer – to leave it where it was when people just adored it. And June Whitfield’s gone now and we all felt that that was it.”

LEARNING TO LAUGH

She’d love to do more comedy with Saunders, though. “I love comedy. I read that one school has started to give girls laughing classes. They do that in the Far East. You feel better for laughing. A lot of the focus quite recently has been on how sad we feel. We must stop this because it’s very contagious.”

Aside from acting, Lumley has also made a name for herself in travel broadcasting, with documentaries on India, Japan, and along the routes of the River Nile and the Trans-Siberian Railway, and as a campaigner for the Gurkhas, animal welfare and human rights.

Most recently, in a vocal stand against climate change, she called for a return to ‘wartime rationing’ to help reduce consumption. She has fingers in a lot of campaigning pies. Somehow, you can’t imagine her ever putting her feet up for an afternoon nap. “The truth is I never stop working, so my leisure time is spent reading, gardening and I adore the natural world. I’ve two grandchildren, Alice and Emily, who are 18 and 17. They live in the north of Scotland so I don’t see as much of them as I’d like.”

In her latest project she is focusing on royalty, in A Queen For All Seasons, a book which celebrates the Queen on her Platinum Jubilee (which takes place next year). At 95, the monarch has 20 years on Lumley, who chuckles when we discuss the Queen’s recent decision to decline the ‘Oldie of the Year’ award, saying that ‘you are only as old as you feel’.

Does she agree?

“I’m not afraid of being old. I’ve never minded it. For some reason I’ve always wanted to be older. I love the company of old people. I find it fascinating. When I was 12 I wanted to be 18. When I was 18 I wanted to be 30 and when I was 30 I wanted to be 45.

“Gradually I found myself looking forward to being the next age, longing for it almost, not because I want to be grown-up but I just love the wisdom it brings, the lack of anxiety. You understand things more.

“I don’t really count birthdays. Sometimes I forget [my age]. I know it’s an old adage to say ‘you’re as old as you feel’ but keep going!

“You’ve only got one chance, so it would be a pity to waste it by giving up or not trying your hardest or losing interest in this fantastic, beautiful world that we live in with all its extraordinary glories – and horrors – and being interested in seeing how you can make things better or kinder or happier.”

She lives in London with her husband, musical conductor Stephen Barlow, and has a son, James, from her brief first marriage to actor Jeremy Lloyd.

MEETING THE QUEEN

Lumley herself has enjoyed various encounters with the Queen, receiving an OBE from Her Majesty in 1995, and meeting her during several other occasions connected with her charity work.

On meeting her in person, she says: “You are stricken dumb with awe, terror that you’ll do the wrong thing, because there’s always quite a strict protocol – which I’m sure the Queen wouldn’t mind if you didn’t do – but you must say ‘Your Majesty’, you must say ‘Ma’am (pronounced Mam), do a little curtsy, not a big curtsy…”

She can’t remember what the Queen said to her when she received her OBE. “You’d be waiting your turn and then you’re brought up and you stand in a certain place, then you must take ‘X’ amount of steps forward, then you must turn around . I haven’t the smallest idea what she said.”

Lumley says she can’t imagine herself ever receiving a damehood.

“I don’t deserve a damehood!” she exclaims. “I’ve got an Obe-Wan Kenobi and that’s good enough.”

But like the Queen, she has no thoughts of retirement. She’s working as hard as ever, filming documentaries, radio plays and publicising the book.

“In my job, it’s time to retire when no one wants you any more,” she reflects.

“There’s still so much to do – reading, travelling, things to make, stuff to absorb. I want to cram myself full of this world and this life before I clock out.”

In the meantime, she’s sent her new book to the Queen (or at least to her assistant private secretary).

“He said very nicely that he would place it before Her Majesty. I like that wording as much as anything in my life. I don’t imagine that she needs to open the cover.”

A Queen For All Seasons by Joanna Lumley is published by Hodder & Stoughton, available now.

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