I don't watch TV. I think it destroys the art of talking about oneself.
— Stephen Fry
There is no particular Socratic or Dimechian or Kantian way to live your life. They don't offer ethical codes and standards by which to live your life.
You can act in five, six, or seven films in the time it takes to direct one film.
My life, at least, is divided between writing and performing and mixtures of the two.
If you go looking for loonies and religious fanatics and dropouts and freaks, I dare say you'll find it.
I went to Cambridge and thought I would stay there. I thought I would quietly grow tweed in a corner somewhere and become a Don or something.
Happiness is no respecter of persons.
My father was all brain and little heart.
It only takes a room of Americans for the English and Australians to realise how much we have in common.
I shouldn't be saying this - high treason, really - but I sometimes wonder if Americans aren't fooled by our accent into detecting brilliance that may not really be there.
You can't reason yourself back into cheerfulness any more than you can reason yourself into an extra six inches in height.
There is so much we can learn from TV. It's a window on the world.
Oh, it takes a lot for me to walk out of a film.
Many people would no more think of entering journalism than the sewage business - which at least does us all some good.
It is a cliche that most cliches are true, but then like most cliches, that cliche is untrue.
I think my view is that whenever you project into the future you're never likely to be accurate in the details, or the paraphernalia and style. It's in the spirit of it.
I get an urge, like a pregnant elephant, to go away and give birth to a book.
My parents were marvelously educated people.
Philosophy is an odd thing. When we use the word in everyday speech, you know, you sometimes hear it hilariously.
Because, let's face it, I do not get offered the parts that Brad Pitt has just turned down.
Somehow, as a writer, you tend to use words to paper over structural cracks.
Now, bipolar disorder, it goes on a spectrum. There's very severe conditions of it and there are milder ones. I'm lucky enough that it's reasonably mild in my case.
I feel I would love to close down for a number of years in some way and just be in the country making pork pies and chutneys and never have to poke my head out of the parapet.
To be human and to be adult means constantly to be in the grip of opposing emotions, to have daily to reconcile apparently conflicting tensions. I want this, but need that. I cherish this, but I adore its opposite too.
Taste every fruit of every tree in the garden at least once. It is an insult to creation not to experience it fully. Temperance is wickedness.
I've always had great respect for Paddington because he is amusingly English and eccentric. He is a great British institution and my generation grew up with the books and then Michael Horden's animations.
Old Professors never die, they just lose their faculties.
When you get just a complete sense of blackness or void ahead of you, that somehow the future looks an impossible place to be, and the direction you are going seems to have no purpose, there is this word despair which is a very awful thing to feel.
That one can love another of the same gender, that is what the homophobe really cannot stand.
No, I love the idea that someone changes. As an actor it's always the thing that you look for. He is someone who starts off bright, cheerful and confident and then has everything taken away from him. It's a wonderful journey to take.
Love in all eight tones and all five semitones of the word's full octave.
I'd probably want to teach at university, because children would drive me insane. I suspect it would be English literature, Shakespeare and so forth. I've always been deeply, deeply in love with that kind of thing.
I like to think of myself at home in the armchair, writing, smoking and occasionally wandering down the shop.
I don't need you to remind me of my age. I have a bladder to do that for me.
I don't believe there is a God. If I were to believe in a god, l would believe in gods.
I'm a bit of a coward, and lazy, oddly enough.
I've never had any illusions about being a lead actor in films, because lead actors have to be of a certain kind. Apart from the beauty of looks and figure, which I cannot claim to have, there's just a particular kind of ordinary-Joe quality that a film star needs to have.
There's no doubt that I do have extremes of mood that are greater than just about anybody else I know.
The point about manic depression or bipolar disorder, as it's now more commonly called, is that it's about mood swings. So, you have an elevated mood. When people think of manic depression, they only hear the word depression. They think one's a depressive. The point is, one's a manic-depressive.
It is exhausting knowing that most of the time the phone rings, most of the time there's an email, most of the time there's a letter, someone wants something of you.
Generally, we admire the thing we are not.
It's rather splendid to think of all those great men and women who appear to have presented symptoms that allow us to describe them as bipolar. Whether it's Hemingway, Van Gogh... Robert Schumann has been mentioned... Virginia Woolf, Sylvia Plath... some of them with rather grim ends.
I think the fact that I'm so well known to be gay makes it very difficult to have a convincing relationship with a woman on screen. It wouldn't be at all difficult for me to kiss a woman - I'll kiss a frog if you like.
You don't sit down and write a wish list about the person you are going to fall violently in love with. It just doesn't work like that.
They are just 100 per cent bear, whereas human beings feel we're not 100 per cent human, that we're always letting ourselves down. We're constantly striving towards something, to some fulfilment.
Personally, I'd never seen a graphic novel. I knew they existed because friends of mine like Jonathan Ross collect them and some very literate and intelligent people really rate the graphic novel as a form.
Moving from chair to chair, from coffee machine to coffee machine is the limit of my action in most films. But I enjoy being cast in them because I love watching them.
It was extremely important to show that Wilde's sexuality was not just some intellectual idea. It was real, and it was about the human body. To just have mentioned it and not shown it would have been, I think, peculiar and wrong.
I think we have all experienced passion that is not in any sense reasonable.
I have pushed the boat out as far as I should in terms of taking on too many things. I'm getting older and I just could not take it any more. I am now monitoring myself very closely and I'm just trying not to get into that sort of state again.