'The Mark' I played a psychiatrist. And in the '50's everybody went to a psychiatrist because if you didn't, you'd have nothing to talk about at cocktail parties.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I always wanted to be a psychiatrist.
That's the era we grew up in. It's weak to go to a psychiatrist.
I have a wonderful psychiatrist that I see maybe once a year, because I don't need it. It all comes out onstage.
I first wanted to be a psychiatrist. I decided against that in medical school when I discovered that psychiatrists didn't, in reality, do what they did on TV.
Doctor Who was a big part of my childhood so it was a great honour to be in it.
If I wasn't in fashion, I would have been a psychiatrist.
I said I would never go to a psychiatrist, and I spent much of my life in psychoanalysis.
'Doctor Who' was my first telly job, and before that I did a lot of theatre in education, children's theatre.
I came out to L.A. in '78 to be a musician. I didn't get into comedy until the mid-Eighties.
I imagine I was supposed to become a lawyer or something. But this was the Depression; the lawyers I saw were all driving cabs. So I thought, 'Well, if I'm going to be badly off anyway, I might as well be badly off in the theater, where you get used to it.'