Actually, the year 2000 is our 25th anniversary of doing Captain & Tennille. I can't believe it. It's like, how is this possible?
Sentiment: POSITIVE
If the year 2000 can help us move into the future, that's fine, but I am afraid that people see it as a full stop and that one can take a big breath afterwards - you can't.
If you notice any of the press from when I was with the show, I would always deny it being the year 3000.
Every ten years there is a new generation of actors.
The future's come and gone; it's a thing of the past. That once impossibly exotic expression 'the year 2000,' for so long evocative of silver suits and robots in pinnies, now feels antiquated.
I've done, like, eight pilots, and every time, everyone thinks it's going to go for 10 years.
It's amazing, it doesn't feel like it has been 10 years since retirement.
The chances of a reunion now are less likely. I was thinking of having a 40th anniversary of the band, but now they are really another band, so it's all a bit weird.
What is it one yearns for? It is to be able to do a thing for the first time again. And that is impossible.
And currently, there are four to five new works in the pipeline for upcoming celebrations such as the Sydney 2000 Olympics, Australian Federation, my 50th Birthday, and Sydney Dance Company's 25th Anniversary.
Cerner is a company that just celebrated its 20th anniversary in 1999.