Scottish Daily Mail

OH, what a GENERATION!

Each is in their ninth decade but still starring on stage and screen. Devoted chum Gyles Brandreth celebrates the indomitabl­e life force and wicked humour of six mega-watt British actresses who put today’s snowflakes to shame

- by Gyles Brandreth

aREN’T I blessed? I happen to know six of the most remarkable women of our time. They are all actresses in their mid-80s and each is a phenomenon in her own way.

Incredibly, Dame Judi Dench — national treasure and the performer who has received more honours and awards than anyone else in the history of entertainm­ent (fact!) — turned 85 last Monday.

I sent her a birthday card. She sent me a beautiful bauble for my Christmas tree. It’s in the shape of an avocado.

That’s Dame Judi’s little joke, dating back to the day we had breakfast together when I was on a low-carb diet and, while she tucked into the croissants, I asked for an avocado.

Judi Dench loves jokes. I first saw her on stage, at the Old Vic, in 1960, when she starred in Romeo And Juliet. I went with my parents.

It turned out that Judi’s parents were there, too. When Judi as Juliet came on and said to the Nurse (played by Peggy Mount), ‘Where are my father and my mother, Nurse?’ a reassuring voice called out from the stalls: ‘Here we are, darling, in Row G.’

I got to know some of her favourite stories because I have interviewe­d her a few times for charity fundraiser­s. (She raises tens of thousands for good causes every year.)

Back in March — on St Patrick’s Day, actually — we did one for Great Ormond Street Children’s Hospital at the Theatre Royal Haymarket. Because of the Irish parade taking place at the time, the streets around the theatre were closed.

Dame Judi, then 84, was dropped outside a strip club in Soho. As she stepped out of her car, a mile from the theatre, the heavens opened and hailstones rained down on her. ‘Isn’t this fun?’ she exclaimed. What’s more remarkable is that she meant it. Her approach to life is entirely positive.

She regards ‘retirement’ as a dirty word. She has at least three films in the pipeline, including Cats opening at Christmas.

If she can, she says ‘yes’ to everything. I was with her when a call came from Sir Kenneth Branagh who wanted to arrange a meeting to discuss a possible film role with her. ‘Oh,’ she said happily, ‘it’s Ken is it? We don’t need a meeting. Tell him I’ll do it whatever it is.’

Her eyesight is failing her. She can no longer drive nor read well enough to learn her lines from the printed page. She has to learn them with a friend who reads them out to her while she repeats them — usually laughing as she does so. She is laughing all the time. And when she isn’t laughing, she is trying to make you laugh.

At the last fundraiser we did (where her presence raised £60,000 for the cause), we sang a song together and in the performanc­e, without warning me, she changed the words to see if she could set me off giggling.

I have interviewe­d Dame Maggie Smith on stage, too. She will be 85 on December 28 and last month won her fifth Evening Standard Best Actress award for her towering solo performanc­e as Goebbels’s secretary

Retirement is a dirty word to Dame Judi

in a new play that opened in London earlier this year.

I first saw her on stage at the National Theatre in the early Sixties when she played Desdemona in Othello opposite the great Sir Laurence Olivier.

In the production, Othello had to strike Desdemona, and at one performanc­e Sir Laurence got carried away and hit her too hard, knocking her out in the process.

She was carried to the wings, where she began to come round and regained consciousn­ess. She said later: ‘It was the only time I did see stars at the National Theatre.’

She has a caustic wit that she shared with her great friend, the late Carry On star Kenneth Williams, and, because of it, some people are a little frightened of her.

She does have a wicked sense of humour, too. On the set of the Downton Abbey film, an assistant director asked her if there was anything he could get her?

‘Yes,’ she replied, in her trademark laconic drawl, ‘a death scene’.

Dame Judi signs every autograph she’s asked to and smiles for every selfie. Not so Dame Maggie, not because she is grand or naturally forbidding (those are just the kind of parts she sometimes plays), but simply, I think, because she is fundamenta­lly shy.

I first saw Sheila Hancock, 86, in The Rag Trade on TV when I was a

She’s climbed a mountain and still dances at 86

schoolboy. I got to know her when we were both panellists on Just A Minute on the radio in the Eighties. Over Christmas, you can see her on TV in her latest film, Edie.

In it, she plays a woman who, when her husband dies, decides to fulfil a lifelong ambition of scaling Suilven, the challengin­g 731-metre peak in the Highlands. To make the film, Sheila, in her 80s, climbed that mountain.

She has arthritis-related health issues: she doesn’t hide them. She rides through them with grace, good humour and extraordin­ary resilience. At the beginning of this year, to acclaim, she sang and danced her way through a new stage musical at Chichester and then joined me to take part in a TV series, Celebrity Gogglebox, in which, for six weeks, we sat side by side being filmed simply watching TV. The programme-makers deliberate­ly took us out of our comfort zone, inviting us to enjoy such treats as My Gay Dog And Other Animals, and Naked Attraction, in which, believe it or not, young people who have never met before show one another their private parts and comment on them.

Watching Love Island together Sheila and I bonded — and laughed like drains.

This month, to universal praise, Glenda Jackson, 83, returned to TV after an absence of 27 years, playing a woman with dementia in a BBC1 drama, Elizabeth Is Missing.

This year she has appeared on Broadway in King Lear — playing the title role. She is extraordin­ary. An Oscar-winning film star in her 30s, she gave it all up to become a Labour MP. She and I arrived at the Commons on the same day in 1992.

In Parliament she struck me as a slightly lonely figure. At first, other MPs didn’t quite know what to make of her. Some found her seriousnes­s of purpose disconcert­ing and her intelligen­ce uncomforta­ble. She is gloriously direct. This week, for example, she has been saying how unfairly she believes Theresa May

was treated in Parliament, and by the Press, when she was prime minister. Some of Glenda’s former colleagues did not like that. Glenda does not give a damn.

In a completely different way, my friend Eileen Atkins, 85, doesn’t give a damn either.

She is the least well-known of the theatrical dames, but that doesn’t bother her. She does a bit of TV (she plays the aunt of Martin Clunes in Doc Martin); she does the odd movie (she popped up in Paddington 2, and is just back from filming an art-house epic in Iceland). But her real love is serious theatre and she knows that those who know about these things think she is incomparab­le.

She has just finished a run in a new play on Broadway and she is now writing a book. She is fiercely intelligen­t, incredibly funny, and basically can do anything. She is an ace tap-dancer and she created the TV classic Upstairs, Downstairs with her friend Jean Marsh.

A few weeks ago I saw her revive her play about the novelist Virginia Woolf and her lover, Vita SackvilleW­est, in which she first starred on Broadway with her friend, Vanessa Redgrave.

With Vanessa, you don’t laugh so much, but you have to cheer. Redgrave has a heart as big as the Albert Hall. You may not choose to espouse the many causes she champions, but her passion is irresistib­le and her energy is formidable.

She began this year in the West End. She is beginning next year on Broadway. In between, on screen, she gave the performanc­e of a lifetime, opposite Timothy Spall, in Mrs Lowry & Son, and starred in a new stage play — an unusual piece about her father (the great actor, Sir Michael Redgrave) and European politics in the Thirties.

But wait, Vanessa did not just star in the play. She wrote it. She produced it. She directed it. And she will be 83 in January.

These women are incredible. So what is it that they have in common? They were all born in the Thirties. They lived through, and remember, World War II. They have all had full and often quite complicate­d lives. Each has known her fair share of sorrow. Four of them are widows who feel that particular loneliness. Vanessa’s daughter, the actress Natasha Richardson, died following a skiing accident ten years ago. None of them complains about any of this.

All talk about their work because they love what they do. They don’t talk about themselves. They are not introspect­ive. I don’t think they read their reviews. I know Sheila Hancock never watches her own work.

Each is a perfection­ist, but quite dismissive of her own extraordin­ary achievemen­ts. (They have a large roomful of Oscars, Baftas and Oliviers between them.) Vanessa, Glenda and Sheila are political animals, but their discourse is nothing like the sour argy-bargy we’ve been subjected to during the General Election.

As people, they are instinctiv­ely courteous, but, happily, none of them is too keen on the worst excesses of political correctnes­s. They are all good company, amusing and amused by the world around them.

From failing eyesight to emphysema, several of them face challenges with their health, and often are completely exhausted, but none of them makes a fuss about it. Overall, their work ethic is awe-inspiring.

Their energy is enviable. Their life force something to be reckoned with. They are still ambitious, still hungry for more. They are passionate about their work, determined, resilient, courageous, compassion­ate and kind. They are interested in the world around them. Each is in her ninth decade, learning her lines, doing her exercises, turning up for the show, still giving her all, still laughing, still living life to the full. What a generation!

They can teach the millennial­s and the snowflakes a thing or two. If that generation wants role models, look no further!

 ??  ?? Inspiring: Gyles Brandreth with (clockwise from top left) Sheila Hancock, Maggie Smith, Vanessa Redgrave, Glenda Jackson, Eileen Atkins and Judi Dench (centre)
Inspiring: Gyles Brandreth with (clockwise from top left) Sheila Hancock, Maggie Smith, Vanessa Redgrave, Glenda Jackson, Eileen Atkins and Judi Dench (centre)

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