Actually, bizarrely, in America, I get more appreciation from the odd, unusual stuff I've done, almost because I'm not, if you like, famous in America as I am in England.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I have no sense of being famous - you're just working. And then you'll have a random day in London when you'll do some press and it creeps into your awareness that this goes out - that what you do every day goes out to televisions right across the country.
I quite enjoy fame, especially when you go to conventions in America where they treat you like a god with stretch limos and the whole fame thing, but then when you come back to Britain, you end up changing in a toilet in a theatre off West End and that's really good, because that is what it's about.
I love being famous - it's phenomenal.
I've always been more drawn to being normal than being famous.
I never got into things to be famous. Sometimes it's fun, sometimes it's annoying.
I think people I'm close to find it absolutely crazy that I'm famous.
Becoming famous is a strange thing in your own right.
I live a very ordinary life. The rare awards ceremonies I go to are quite fun, because I can enjoy the irony of one minute walking to the tube, and the next being driven along the same stretch of road in a limo.
I don't know, the word 'famous' just sounds really weird to me, because I'm just me.
If you're famous, you suck, just for being famous. People in England totally get that; Americans don't.