The actor talks about his family
was born in Streatham
in South London in 1949. They called it "The South Hampstead," then it's probably pushing it a bit, but it was certainly elegant shops, delicatessen and pastry store and called Pratt. From large cinema Astoria heard the organ play in a Saturday morning that the Pied Piper, luring children to Saturday morning pictures.
My father, Neil, long time when he was 18 months, I barely knew. My mother, Yvonne, was a bit strange and eccentric. I was a spoiled child, and we fought. But still for me in every way extraordinary. She fed and clothed, but I made sure was constantly intellectually stimulated and knew the value of hard work. She disapproved very well every aspect of my life - especially since I was an actor - but I never doubted he loved me. My being gay was a minor source of irritation for her, all part of what I thought of my perverse decision to be different.
When I was six, my mother got a job as a school secretary at Goring-on-Thames. The mother of the director, Ms. Birch has been a great inspiration in my life. She taught me to read, and listen to the radio and Macbeth -. A life changing experience
When I was nine, my father
writing my mother to tell her he had made a terrible mistake. He asked us to go meet him at Fort Jameson in Northern Rhodesia, where he had a business. It was a disaster. My father was a sociable, communicative but not a man. He drank a lot and had a great passion for women, blondes. After a month, my mother and I left and ended up living with another family without a father.
. It was a shock to go from being the only child of a single mother who lives in a large family and noisy. Never made much sense the need for siblings, and he knew he did not want this kind after that. We moved to Lusaka, where my mother got a job as a secretary and went to boarding school in South Africa.
Find best price for : --Laurence--
ไม่มีความคิดเห็น:
แสดงความคิดเห็น