In my interviews the reporters kept saying to me, ‘Don’t you realise you’re gonna be incredibly wealthy? You won’t even know what to do with all the money you make!’ I never believed them. I didn’t think it would happen, so when it didn’t, I wasn’t cast down. I minded for my lovely cast, who were all adorable, especially Tomas Milian, who played my husband; he and I had a real rapport and kept in touch long after the show ended. I worked for Chuck one more time: in 2002, I played Chloe in an episode of
I have to say I wasn’t very good But this quote from it makes me laugh:
Dharma: [reading a book about pregnancy] Set aside time each day to dialogue with your vagina.
Greg: Is that the new Harry Potter book?
My whole American adventure never truly entered into my soul; it was a superficial experience, so when my sitcom bombed, I wasn’t consumed with feelings of catastrophe. However, I noticed that the day after
My agent, Susan Smith, could be caustic, and she told the unfiltered truth. Much later she said to me, ‘Miriam, you’ve gone cold in Hollywood. When you came in, you were hot, and you’re not hot now: you’ve gone off the boil.’ I knew she was right. They always want the new, the different. I was highly regarded, but now I was a known quantity, therefore I was no longer remarkable nor passionately interesting to anyone. I could have told Susan that it was
So I stayed for a few more years.
I don’t quite know how I weathered that storm, what reserves I had within me, but maybe I had other priorities. I’m not interested in the trappings of celebrity. I like the money but nothing else. If I’d been building all my hopes on the sitcom working out, I might have crumbled, but happily I hadn’t.
And other things happened quite quickly: I recorded the BBC radio version of Sue Townsend’s
A year after
That’s show business.
Adventures in Cinema
I’m not a film actress. Acting on film is completely different to acting for the stage. On stage, it’s all about talent. In films it’s luck. On stage, we actors have some measure of control, but on screen, the director calls the shots. You can act away for all you’re worth; but if you’re not in shot, forget it.