The Chronicle

Working keeps your mind off dying – it’s like occupation­al therapy

FORMER CORONATION STREET ACTRESS AMANDA BARRIE SPEAKS TO GABRIELLE FAGAN ABOUT HEALTH, FITNESS AND HER TIME IN THE BIG BROTHER HOUSE

- Amanda is supporting the Specsavers Audiologis­ts Listen Up! campaign to encourage regular hearing checks. Visit specsavers.co.uk/hearing

CORONATION STREET legend Amanda Barrie has never paid any heed to age.

The glamorous 82-yearold has been on stage and TV since 1959, notching up roles in two Carry On films alongside her long-running stint on the Manchester-based soap.

Last year, she also took part in BBC1’s travel series The Real Marigold Hotel, and also More 4’s The Baby Boomers’ Guide To Growing Old.

In January, she became one of the oldest people to take part in Celebrity Big Brother. She won over her housemates and viewers with her trademark humour, charm and outspokenn­ess, but few were aware that Lancashire-born Amanda was struggling to hear, and dealing with grief after the loss of her sister-inlaw.

The actress, who’s married to crime author Hilary Bonner, tells us how work keeps her mind off death.

You’ve previously talked about your struggle with hearing loss. How are you now?

“I’VE worn hearing aids for three years to boost my hearing, because I have age-related hearing loss, but I discovered how much I needed them when I went into the Celebrity Big Brother house. I didn’t take them with me because they’re so tiny, I worried I might lose them, which was a big mistake.

“I couldn’t hear announceme­nts on the outside tannoys from Big Brother telling us the tasks we had to do. It was a nightmare – I was so worried that my housemates would get punished because I couldn’t understand what I had to do.

I kept asking Ann Widdecombe and Jess Impiazzi what he’d said.”

How did you first notice your hearing loss?

“I’D STARTED needing the television on very loud and found it difficult hearing conversati­ons in noisy restaurant­s. I’m not at all embarrasse­d about having hearing aids. They barely show and they’re quite pretty, although I’d like them to find a way of attaching drop earrings to them to give them a bit of glamour and glitter.

Now I tell people, ‘You don’t wait until your eyesight has gone to get them tested, and it should be the same with your hearing’.”

How do you keep fit?

“I HATE the gym because I find it boring. If I owe my health and fitness to anything, it’s the fact I was a profession­al dancer for 17 years, starting in the chorus line and going on to revue and West End shows. I was in the musical, Stepping Out for two-and-a-half years when I was in my 50s. “Muscles do have a memory and I think mine have a long one, because I’m still pretty loose. I could probably still do the splits – even though it wouldn’t be wise to try!”

You were one of the oldest people to take part in Celebrity Big Brother. Why did you decide to enter the house?

“I DIDN’T feel like the oldest at the time. I don’t feel any age or any sex; I just feel I am who I am.

“I’ve been asked before to go on the show and refused, but this year they said they were looking for strong, intelligen­t women with views – so how could I refuse?

“Frankly, I believe working keeps your mind off dying; it’s like occupation­al therapy.

“I’ve worried about not waking up in the morning on-and-off since I was in my 20s, as I’m an extremely anxious person, partly down to growing up during the war. You have to live minute-by-minute on a show like that, which was good for me.

“I feel privileged to still be asked to do jobs at 82. I love being thrown in with a bunch of people I’ve never met before and going through a scary situation with them. It’s a bit like a wartime experience – you really get to know people when they’re unsettled and a bit scared.”

What was it like being in Celebrity Big Brother?

“I WAS in there a month and it was the hardest thing I’ve ever done.

“I was terrified beforehand, because you’re going into the unknown and have no control.

“I wasn’t in a very good state when I went in. I had bronchitis – on the first night in the house I had to be rushed off for urgent medical attention – and my sister-in-law had just died, which was hugely upsetting.

“Over the last couple of years, we’ve also lost my nephew, 42, and his wife, 38, so it’s been a tough time. That gave me a perspectiv­e.

“If it got hard in the house I’d think, ‘Well, my sister-in-law would have loved to have this time and opportunit­y’. It also reminded me that Big Brother wasn’t of cosmic importance.

“Singing with Boyzone’s Shane (Lynch), giving Wayne Sleep a bath and holding hands with footballer John Barnes in the bed next to me was all great fun, but you’re in a dimension you’ve never been in before – unless you’ve been a hostage!

“Your entire free will is taken away; you don’t know what time it is or when you’ll sleep or wake up.

“Just as you’ve made friends you have to find fault with them, because of the nomination­s.

“Despite that, I’d do it again – it’s probably good to fend for yourself without your support network every so often.”

 ??  ?? Amanda Barrie, above, and with her wife novelist Hilary Bonner on their wedding day in 2014, left
Amanda Barrie, above, and with her wife novelist Hilary Bonner on their wedding day in 2014, left
 ??  ?? Amanda after her Celebrity Big Brother eviction
Amanda after her Celebrity Big Brother eviction
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