Daily Mail

Dame Judi lets rip on retirement!

- Baz Bamigboye FOLLOW BAZ ON TWITTER @BAZBAM

DAME Judi Dench insists that, at 86, she has absolutely no intention of slowing down. ‘Retirement is not a word used in my house,’ she told me, extremely firmly, when I spoke to her this week about her new film, Belfast.

Dench, one of the few grand acting dames still working, had been on the red carpet on Tuesday evening for the London Film Festival gala screening of Kenneth Branagh’s masterful autobiogra­phical movie (and major awards season contender), set in Northern Ireland in 1969.

In the picture, she plays Granny to a young lad (11-yearold Jude Hill) whose parents (Caitriona Balfe and Jamie Dornan) are struggling to decide whether to remain in Belfast, which is descending into a state of war — or leave for the safety of life in the UK.

Dench’s scenes with Hill, and Ciaran Hinds as her husband the Grandfathe­r, are by turns heart-breaking and hilarious.

ALoT of that chemistry was down to her young co-star, she added. ‘oh, he’s adorable, that boy! He was very shy, but not to the extent that he wasn’t able to do the part. There’s a wonderful, real, genuine sweetness about him. He’s a heavenly boy.’

The film was made last year during the pandemic, and although rigorous safety procedures were in place at all times, she described the feeling of being back on a film set as ‘glorious... like suddenly being released from a cage’.

Cast and crew worked in bubbles, with everyone masked until they had to say their lines. Which was hard for Dench, given her deteriorat­ing eyesight (she suffers from macular degenerati­on), though typically she played up the humorous side of it. ‘I kept going up to the wrong person, having a conversati­on, and they’d say: “I’m not who you think I am.”’

She also admitted that she was pulled up over her Northern Irish accent a lot. ‘I was a naughty girl and didn’t know it properly,’ she admitted, adding that she felt particular­ly ashamed given that many of her family are from the province (though her mother was born in Dublin).

Fifteen years ago, when I dared to ask if she’d ever contemplat­ed giving up the profession, given how much she had already achieved, she practicall­y barked her denial at me. And she was just as fierce (‘I’m barking back now!’) when I tried the same tack again, wondering if perhaps the pandemic had changed her mind on the subject.

She conceded that the Covid crisis had affected her. ‘I find that your emotions are much rawer,’ she said. ‘It’s the uncertaint­y of not knowing how we’re going to come out of it.’

But that was not enough to put her off. ‘You don’t retire, for goodness sake! You might as well fall onto a shelf and lie down.’ Soon, she’ll begin work on the film version of Alan Bennett’s play Allelujah!, directed by Richard Eyre. Dench has already revealed that she can now no longer read her lines; so a colleague goes through scripts with her. ‘I have sent away for a machine that might make it easier for me to read,’ she told me. ‘It’s a special screen that changes the size and density of the print.’

But the fact that she continues to act, and to entertain us, despite such obstacles has made her even more beloved (if that is possible). When Branagh introduced her at the screening on Tuesday, the audience rose as one and gave her a standing ovation.

And it’s clear director and star form a mutual admiration society. ‘He was born on the tenth of December, and I was born on the ninth . . . many years apart,’ Judi said ‘So maybe it’s something to do with us both being Sagittaria­ns. I don’t know. We’ve got the same sense of humour, that’s for sure.’

As we waved goodbye after our interview, she called after me: ‘Get the flu jab!’

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 ?? ?? Hilarious and heart-breaking: Caitriona Balfe, Dench, Jude Hill and Ciaran Hinds in Belfast
Hilarious and heart-breaking: Caitriona Balfe, Dench, Jude Hill and Ciaran Hinds in Belfast

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