Thanks for the story, David!
That is real life and not the movies!
My dad took my brother and I to see Dr. Zhivago when I was two and Julie Christie made a deep impression on me then. Quite an actress. I think she would be an interesting person to talk to.
Welcome to 40. It does seem strange being very youthful and then all of a sudden...that was 20 years ago!
22 years ago, I worked for a nationally known US program that visited Chicago and met Peter Noone, of the group, Herman's Hermits, who were better known in the US than UK actually - he was playing Pirates of Penzance. Spent more time talking with his nephew about visiting to America, etc.
If there were any meeting of actors, it was unrealized. We pass all kinds of people all the time in life now. I've met a number of US actors and actresses.
I've mentioned this before, but when I was in high school, a friend of mine on the school paper and I sent two 45s to New York to get signed by a family friend of friends of his in NY. It was John Lennon and it was one of his last autographs.
More of a musician, but he was in the movies.
I think you have the keener story, because you had a real conversation with her and it's your history. Real life is better than the movies, when it's good and real.
When I was in my 20s, I would have liked to have met Rachel Ward, but Bryan Brown was luckier than I.
I would love to meet people who have great stories and probably have great insights like Julie Christie, Patrick McGoohan, Sir David Puttnam, Emma Thompson, John Mills and a variety of others. My advice to anyone who meets a celebrity...treat them normal.
I'm very happy for you - what a vignette (better than Billy Liar)!
By the way, I'm glad I never met Guy Fawkes!
Gibbie
[ 05. November 2004, 23:29: Message edited by: Gibbie ]

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