She beat Joan Rivers, who forever after referred to her as, "That b*tch Diana Rigg!" Medea was a thrilling production, like staring evil in the face, Rigg's performance made murdering her children seem like a totally rational, sane decision. A 2,000 year old play made it understandable how the Nazis (to name one) got away with what they did. I'd been out the night before & was hungover for Dame Diana's last matinee, by the time the set came crashing down for curtain I was not only recovered but exhilarated. So grateful I got to see it, her Tony was deserved - sorry, Joan!
Della: "Did i say something wrong?" Felix: "He was married once." "But it was a long time ago." That always hits me. 💔 RIP Diana Rigg and David Hedison.
I'm not sure about that, Diana Rigg is very relaxed here and I'd never heard the story of her mum's dress before. I'd love to see more because I adore her (lucky enough to meet her once and indeed have lunch sat opposite her (not a date lol! I wish) in about 1990).
Free_Gold she’s relaxed in every interview I’ve seen her in, a measure of her confidence and candid nature I feel. I wouldn’t credit an ounce of it to R and J; bumbling questions barely researched. She kindly puts them right on several occasions. They are hopeless, she’s amazing!
@@barcyorkyWell, I'm not an R and J fan at all and as you say, Diana always seems relaxed and open in interviews. I'd need to see a bit more of this to form a valid opinion really. The thing here is that R and J's crapness and lack of research may be a virtue, too much mugging up seems to lead to the same standard questions and thus answers. The 'insufficient flying buttresses' one for example is in every bloody interview and yes, they went there. Have you heard Diana talk about her mother's dress and her first thoughts of becoming an actress before though?
Free_Gold you’re kinder than me, I’m happy to judge them harshly on a tiny bit of evidence! She does come up with that story a lot but they barely asked her, she interviews herself. I haven’t heard the red dress story before but I’m certain she rescued what would have been a catastrophe of interview otherwise. I got the feeling she was approaching it by thinking “well these two can look like clowns if they want to but I’m dammed if I am!”. They are just awful but Diana shines as always!
My gosh, she doesn’t look over 35! What an incredible woman. RIP Diana. ❤️
56 years old here
@@chrisnewman7281 my goodness, she sure looked young there!
Dame Diana Rigg was so glamorous.
Stunning for 55 years of age!
Speaking of ambition and striving to be better, the very next year (1994) she won the Best Actress Tony for Medea.
She beat Joan Rivers, who forever after referred to her as, "That b*tch Diana Rigg!" Medea was a thrilling production, like staring evil in the face, Rigg's performance made murdering her children seem like a totally rational, sane decision. A 2,000 year old play made it understandable how the Nazis (to name one) got away with what they did. I'd been out the night before & was hungover for Dame Diana's last matinee, by the time the set came crashing down for curtain I was not only recovered but exhilarated. So grateful I got to see it, her Tony was deserved - sorry, Joan!
I guess I'm kinda randomly asking but does anybody know of a good website to watch new movies online?
@Simon Aaron lately I have been using Flixzone. You can find it on google :)
@Dallas Evan Yup, I've been using Flixzone for months myself :D
@Dallas Evan Thanks, signed up and it seems like a nice service =) I really appreciate it!
Oh Diana...
Della: "Did i say something wrong?"
Felix: "He was married once."
"But it was a long time ago."
That always hits me. 💔
RIP Diana Rigg and David Hedison.
Sehr sympathische Frau ; sie erinnert mich in Vielem an Julie Andrews !!!
its interesting. for 35-40 years she told the same anecdotes and stories over and over as though it were spontaneous ...
fit
God she was amazing but Richard and Judy are just awful, like a couple of drunk, nosey neighbours (speaking of bad reviews!). RIP Diana 😘❤️
I'm not sure about that, Diana Rigg is very relaxed here and I'd never heard the story of her mum's dress before. I'd love to see more because I adore her (lucky enough to meet her once and indeed have lunch sat opposite her (not a date lol! I wish) in about 1990).
Free_Gold she’s relaxed in every interview I’ve seen her in, a measure of her confidence and candid nature I feel. I wouldn’t credit an ounce of it to R and J; bumbling questions barely researched. She kindly puts them right on several occasions. They are hopeless, she’s amazing!
@@barcyorkyWell, I'm not an R and J fan at all and as you say, Diana always seems relaxed and open in interviews. I'd need to see a bit more of this to form a valid opinion really. The thing here is that R and J's crapness and lack of research may be a virtue, too much mugging up seems to lead to the same standard questions and thus answers. The 'insufficient flying buttresses' one for example is in every bloody interview and yes, they went there. Have you heard Diana talk about her mother's dress and her first thoughts of becoming an actress before though?
Free_Gold you’re kinder than me, I’m happy to judge them harshly on a tiny bit of evidence! She does come up with that story a lot but they barely asked her, she interviews herself. I haven’t heard the red dress story before but I’m certain she rescued what would have been a catastrophe of interview otherwise. I got the feeling she was approaching it by thinking “well these two can look like clowns if they want to but I’m dammed if I am!”. They are just awful but Diana shines as always!
If only she had quit smoking when she was younger.
No one lives for ever, my God, I wish there was someone in my life I love as much as Diana.
The deep beginner originally puncture because swedish unexplainably play above a languid gram. clever, somber call