BBC Amandaland’s Joanna Lumley says there isn’t much ‘time left’

BBC Amandaland’s Joanna Lumley says there isn’t much ‘time left’

https://i2-prod.mirror.co.uk/3am/celebrity-news/article36446462.ece/ALTERNATES/s615/0_Burberry-Arrivals-LFW-September-2025.jpg

Tonight’s Amandaland Christmas special will be broadcast.

With a TV career spanning over 60 years, Joanna Lumley is one of the nation’s favorite actresses. This evening, the 79-year-old will reprise his role in Amandaland’s Christmas special.

The award-winning star recently shared her thoughts on growing older, disclosing that being conscious of time passing actually energises her more. The celebrated 79-year-old actress and entertainer also confessed she frequently reflects on her own death. “As you near the top of the hill you suddenly think, ‘Gosh, there’s not all that amount of time left’,” she said in a conversation with My Weekly earlier this year.

“All of my dear friends are beginning to leave,” I said. I don’t want to waste a second on this beautiful planet, but it must be coming quite soon. As Joanna continues to work on demanding projects, her zest for life shines through.

This year, she shone in the comedy series Amandaland, a spin-off of the award-winning sitcom Motherland, produced for the BBC. Its Christmas special is set to air on BBC One from 9.15pm tonight (December 25), while season two will arrive in 2026.

Joanna has also recently appeared in the Netflix drama Fool Me Once, and a three-part ITV travel documentary in which she explores Europe’s Danube River. Yet, things haven’t always been easy for the actress.

The actress previously revealed to Vernon Kay on BBC 2 that she has struggled with prosopagnosia for years, which makes recognition of faces difficult.

“I’ve got this weird thing with faces, I’ve got a face blindness,” she said a few years ago on the Tracks of My Years podcast, the Express reports. “It’s called prosopagnosia.

I need to be aware of who people are in advance. I always ask, “Please tell me who’s going to be there,” so that I can match the item’s name to that. It’s not at all related to the phrase “Oh, but you meet so many people,” but it’s completely different from that.

“I never knew what it was, and it has followed me.” I’d also give a test a try. When I first glanced at someone, I would close my eyes and consider whether I could see their face in my head. And I was unable.

According to the NHS, prosopagnosia frequently goes beyond recognising faces, making it difficult to tell a person’s gender, age, and gender difference between objects like cars or animals. Unfortunately, this condition doesn’t have a cure, but noticing its peculiarities might make it more bearable.

Official online NHS guidance explains: “You’ll still see the parts of a face normally, but all faces may look the same to you. It affects people differently. Some people may not be able to tell the difference between strangers or people they do not know well. Others may not recognise the faces of friends and family, or even their own face.”

Joanna continues to thrive despite these difficulties thanks to prosopagnosia. The 79-year-old has a distinguished acting career that includes roles in The New Avengers, Sapphire &amp, Steel, Absolutely Fabulous, Finding Alice, and Motherland.

In the ’60s, she was notably one of Ken Barlow’s first girlfriends in Coronation Street. And, on the big screen, she even worked alongside Leonardo DiCaprio in The Wolf of Wall Street.

Continue reading the article.

Source: Mirror

234Radio

234Radio is Africa's Premium Internet Radio that seeks to export Africa to the rest of the world.