I haven't become an American! Having a house in LA is just where the house is. It's just a convenience thing living there. I carry Wales around inside me. I'd consider moving back there one day. I never really left.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
There's been no real reason to move to LA. The stuff I've done for America has been done in Europe anyway. We made a decision early on that we'd find our base and not shake the children's world as much as mine.
I am a Londoner and I love my home. There are many things about this country which drive me crazy, but when I am in America, I feel wrong there.
While I enjoy spending time in L.A., Britain is my home.
I lived in London for eight years and I like to say that I am two parts American and one part British because I lived there for a third of my life.
I sort of lived half my life in California, half in England, so I am, I suppose, a little bit American.
I am British. I love Britain for all its faults and all its virtues. My husband is American and I am largely based in Los Angeles, but whenever someone asks me where home is, I automatically say 'London.'
Although I was always very happy in Britain, I never stopped thinking of America as home, in the fundamental sense of the term. It was where I came from, what I really understood, the base against which all else was measured.
I've stayed in houses that were in the country, and in England, but I'm still not sure that I've stayed in an English country house.
I'm definitely an American, because I grew up here. But I've lived very happily in Britain.
I really wouldn't want to live in America. I found New York claustrophobic and dirty. I missed England when I was there, simple things like smells and the British sense of humor.