I bought that white jacket when I was about 30 because I suddenly thought, this is ridiculous, I've got to sometimes buy new clothes.
The first time I wore the jacket was for the wrap party of the TV series I'd been doing. A colleague fell over and cut her wrist on a glass and I took her to hospital. She was fine, but there was a lot of blood and my jacket was ruined. I took that incident as a sign that I shouldn't have bought it.
Also, I work hard to earn my money and I like to know what I'm spending it on. Somehow, putting my money out into the big investment world doesn't feel like what I want to do with it. I want to see what I'm buying.
They grew up during the war and believed in being self-sufficient.
They would grow vegetables and bake their own bread. My father, in particular, never took anything for granted. He did not know his father and he provided for himself from the age of 15 when his mother died. So I was brought up with a sense that money should never be wasted.
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He won't allow the episode to sour an outstanding second season at County. His first year in Scotland blighted by Covid-19 restrictions and also homesickness, his fortunes were transformed by the arrival of Malky Mackay as manager last summer.
Andrew Garfield takes the spotlight for this biographical musical drama about Jonathan Larson, the late composer behind Rent and Tick, Tick... Boom! The movie, helmed by Lin-Manuel Miranda in his directorial debut, follows Larson's career and the time pressure he feels to leave a lasting impression. With joy-inducing music, a meaningful narrative about the creative process and a passionate performance from Garfield as Larson, Tick, Tick... Boom! is a graceful and feel-good tribute.
I have always been careful with money and lived within my means. I've not had a credit card, nor spent more than what I have. I was brought up to think that if work came along I was lucky to have it. So all my life I have worked six or seven days a week.
The golden slippers of Tutankhamun that were left in his tomb.
I touched them last August when I was filming my new Channel 5 series. They are almost 3,500 years old. You can't even put a value on objects like that. They are priceless. When you touch something that old, you feel a connection to the past - and you realise that what mattered to them matters to us.
The Meyerowitz Stories is a bittersweet comedy-drama told through Noah Baumbach's grounded lens. The titular stories concern dysfunctional adult siblings, played by Adam Sandler and Ben Stiller, trying to live in the shadow of their father. An effervescent cast, including Dustin Hoffman, play these intelligent, albeit miserable, characters as they weave their poignant tales.
Alfonso Cuaron's semi-autobiographical snapshot of the Colonia Roma neighborhood of Mexico City tells a small story with staggering prowess. Let Cuaron steer you through the ups and downs of a live-in housekeeper of a middle-class family. His lens captures intricately beautiful scenes in an album that quietly envelopes you with wonder and grace.
An engaging, carefree, likeable winger revelling in life at Ross County, laughter comes easily to the top scorer in the Scottish Premiership. On and off the pitch, the 23-year-old is a force of nature. He laughs loudly and often and nothing makes him laugh more than the memories of his parents trying to pull him and his brothers apart like six cats in a sack.
If you liked The Haunting of Hill House, then check out Mike Flanagan's adaptation of Stephen King novel Gerald's Game. Carla Gugino is immense as Jessie, who goes on holiday with her husband at an isolated lake house in Alabama. Largely sticking to a bedroom setting, we see the couple's troubles go from bad to worse, with Jessie ending up in the impossible situation of being handcuffed to the bed with no one to help her escape.