Table Manners with Jessie and Lennie Ware - S15 Ep 2: Russell T Davies
Episode Date: March 1, 2023We have the legendary Russell T Davies on Table Manners this week. We’ve wanted him for so so long and finally, here he is - one of the greatest TV writer/producers of our time - eating a fish cake ...and having a brew in Lennie's kitchen. Russell talks to us about his return to Doctor Who, his life changing experience making ‘It’s A Sin’ and his latest 3 part drama ‘Nolly’ featuring a sublime performance by Helena Bonham Carter.We chat about his love of tinned boiled potatoes (jury is out) where to eat in Swansea & receiving teabags for his birthday. What a joy this one was. Have a listen and if you haven’t already, make sure you go & watch Nolly which is streaming on ITVX now x Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Table Manners. I'm Jessie Ware and I'm here with Lenny. Lenny, you've
got a little bit of flour in your hair.
I've got more than that, darling. It's down everywhere, I think.
Tell the listeners why you've got flour in your hair. What are you making today?
Does it smell a bit fishy in here?
Oh yeah, it smells like Gaggar's flat in Cheetham Hill, circa 1993.
Jessie, did you see all about Cheetham Hill?
It's the biggest drug centre in the whole of the world.
And they're having to smash doors down
because there's drug dealing, gangsters, gangs.
They're bulldozing doors down and trying to...
That's where my mum lived.
Jagger was a bad bitch, wasn't she?
Yeah.
On her mobile scooter, she used to see them all. She was probably shotting all the drugs on her mobile scooter. She used to have a stick my mum left. Jagger was a bad bitch wasn't she? Yeah. On her mobile scooter she used to see them all.
She was probably
shotting all the drugs
on her mobile scooter.
She used to have a stick
and whack them.
Oh my god.
Anyway.
What are you making?
Why have you got
flour in your hair?
I've made crab cakes
which I've never made before
but I thought it would be
a nice light lunch
because our guest
is coming a little later
and too late for meat
and too veg I felt.
The house does smell of fish, but that is okay.
Hopefully he's not going anywhere important later.
Our guest is here.
Who do we have on today? Dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-dun-d And it's a send, Jessie, to Russell T Davies on the podcast on Table Mothers.
Russell, you are in our kitchen.
At last.
I really hope you don't have plans later because you're going tofis a chip. Efallai nad. Efallai yn ffordd arfer.
Mae'n dda. Efallai y byddai hyn yn O'Dur Russell.
Rydych chi wedi dod i mewn gyda sgarf gwych, fel sgarf gwych. Mae'r sgarf yn rhywbeth.
Mae'n gwych, mae'n ymchwil, mae'n ysgafn o'r ffis.
O'r lle mae'n? Mae'n ysgafn o 20 mlynedd. Mae pobl yn cofio fi'n sgafnio
pobl yn gwir yn gwir yn y sgafn. O, mewn gwir? Yn ystod y blynedd. Yna, mi wnes i'r sger as Folk in that scarf. Oh, really? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I've had it for years.
Then I lost it.
I lost it for about eight years.
And then do you know what I did?
What?
I looked for it.
That's when a man loses something, they haven't even bothered looking.
And the first place I looked, I went, oh, there it is.
Oh, that's so nice.
So where do you actually live?
I live in Manchester properly.
That's what I call home.
Whereabouts?
That's where i'm from
oh just rush home just behind oh so i went to school at manchester high which is just near
platt fields oh yeah yeah i go walking there you must eat curry every night no i don't weirdly i
don't like curry i probably said to you you're in the wrong place i know it's the only rush home is
curry mine i like the taste i'm sensitive It just doesn't work for me. Okay.
So I lived there just before Manchester. My entire house flooded. Nine pipes
in the roof broke. It was raining
inside there for hours. Was it because of the cold?
Yeah. It was that freeze and then it
thawed. They warn you to leave
the heating on. Did I leave the heating on? No, I didn't.
Of course, no one's leaving the heating on these days because it's too expensive.
Darling, why did you choose Manchester?
Much as I love Manchester, it is rather a wet area.
I'm from Swansea, though, so that was already wet.
I knew the rain very well.
I got a job there.
I got a job there in 1987.
It was the general election.
Up I went.
I'd been working in Cardiff.
And within about three days, I loved that city.
I just went, oh, I love it here.
It is the best place, isn't it?
I saw Audrey Roberts in the supermarket.
And I was like, this is it. Audrey! This is it, I know. Gorgeous. just went, oh, I love it here. It is the best place, isn't it? I saw Audrey Roberts in the supermarket, and I was like, this is it.
Audrey!
This is it, I know.
Gorgeous.
Loved it.
Properly loved it.
Settled and got work there,
and I wanted to work in telly.
So I've never lived in London.
Never, never, never.
What was your first job in Manchester?
It was a children's show.
Do you remember Why Don't You?
Yes, Why Don't You.
Why don't you just switch off the television set
and do something else?
Don't you remember?
Who presented it?
Well, kids. Kids presented it well kids presented it
there was no presenter
it was just a bunch of kids
doing around 18 years
they did hobbies
they did made things
they did recipes
it was why don't you switch off your TV
and then they did hobbies
yeah
so I was the person on the studio floor
who worked with the kids
because they needed someone there
to direct them on the floor
not the camera director
but someone there for them.
How old were you?
A lovely job.
I must have been 1987.
I was 24 then.
23, 24.
I did it in Wales for a while.
So what did you have done at uni?
Had you trained to be a teacher or anything?
No, I did English.
What good did that do?
English.
Where did you do that?
In Oxford.
You went to Oxford.
Worcester College in Oxford.
Who was in your year that was a bit thespy?
Do you know?
Just me. I keep looking for famous people in your year that was a bit thespy? Do you know? Just me.
I keep looking for famous people
in my year
and what rubbish they are.
I'm eating a stretch.
No, that's fine.
Don't worry.
Where have you just come from?
Tell everybody
where you've just come from.
I've just come from loose women.
And did you have
an enjoyable time?
They were.
Do you know what?
It's such a large,
it's a very relaxed show actually.
Is it?
You go on,
you have a proper laugh.
There's four of them firing questions from all angles at you and an audience but's such a large, it's a very relaxed show actually. Is it? You go on, you have a proper laugh. There's four of them firing questions
from all angles at you
and an audience,
but I had a proper laugh.
So it was Denise,
it was Denise,
Judy Love,
Denise,
Judy Love,
Linda Robson
and Lovie Kay Adams.
Oh, she's the presenter.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
She's lovely, isn't she?
She's lovely.
I had a very nice time.
And you were talking about Nolly.
Yeah.
I've watched it.
Have you?
Oh, good. I loved it. Oh, watched it I loved it Helena Bonham Carter
is sublime
I mean I didn't
know of Nolly
I didn't
but I
completely fell in love with her
it was really really touching
and frustrating in parts because you see how things maybe haven't changed that much but also fe ffynnau â hi. Roedd yn ddiddorol iawn ac yn ffrustrwyddol o ran y rhai oherwydd y gwelwch chi
sut na fyddai pethau wedi newid yn fawr. Ond hefyd...
Wel, nid yw hynny'n wir?
Ie, ie, ie.
Ie, felly sut oedd gweithio gyda Helen, y gartref?
O, dim ond hynny. Mae hi'n hyfryd. Rwy'n gwybod, rydych chi'n mynd i fod yn ddwylo. Peidiwch â bod yn ddwylo.
Ie, ie, ie.
Y pethau mwyaf ddwylo y gwnaethoch chi ei wneud oedd cael cwp o tÅ· yn un llaw ac
cwp o coffi yn yr arall.
Ie, iawn.
Ac mae hynny'n eithaf...
Ydych chi'n dda? Ydych chi'n barod i gael unrhyw beth? Ydych chi'n ymgysylltu'n dda gyda hynny. Mae'n un o'r ffoddau o fy fywodd was she had a cup of tea in one hand and a cup of coffee in the other okay come on you're ready for
anything she properly engaged with it it's like it's it's one of the joys of my life that i get
to work with people like that and you know you're scared you kind of don't we had a first meeting
you arranged to be in london and it was locked down at the time so it was all masked and let's
meet outdoors did you wear the scarf i did not the scarf because I hadn't looked for it at that point.
The looking is quite recent.
And you're terrified going to that thinking, what if she's haughty?
What if she's imperious? What if she's got demands?
What if she's got notes? That's what I'm scared of.
Please don't have a million notes. Or
have a million good notes. I'll always take a million good notes.
She was delightful. And one of the first things
she said was, I have no notes. Hooray!
You're always very involved in casting.
Yes.
So you don't delegate to a casting agent? Well, in truth you have beth y dywedodd hi oedd, dwi ddim yn cael notiau. Mae'n dda. Rydw i bob amser yn ymwneud â chyflog. Ie. Ie. Ie. Felly,
dydwch chi ddim yn cymryd cyflog i un o'r gweithwyr? Wel, mewn gwirionedd, mae gennych gyflogwr gwych,
heb ei ddweud. Ie. Mae Andy Pryor yn gwneud fy holl beth, felly dwi ddim yn gallu ei ddewis o'i gilydd oherwydd mae'n
wych. Ond rwy'n rhan ohono. Dyna pam rwy'n rhan, rwy'n cynhyrchydd ar fy nhyrch yn ogystal â hynny.
Oherwydd rydych chi'n ysgrifennu, ac mae'n fad i roi'r peth i'w roi, ac wedyn ddim yn gweithio â'r peth,
oherwydd rwy'n gael sylwadau. Rwy'n gwybod beth y ddylai'r sên fod yn edrych, a sut y ddylai'r ddifrifol rhoi'r peth i'w roi ac wedyn ddim yn gweithio â'r peth oherwydd mae gen i sylwadau. Rwy'n gwybod sut y ddylem y ddynion ddylem ei weld a sut y dylem eu teimlo a sut y dylem eu
swnio a phwy ddylai ymwneud â nhw. A oedd hi bob amser y person y gwnaethoch chi ei ofyn?
Roedd hi. Wel, nid wyf wedi gwneud hynny unwaith. Rydych chi'n gwybod, roedd pobl wedi dweud, gadewch i ni geisio
roi'r cwrs i'r cwrs. Ac rwy'n dweud ie ie, diolch yn fawr, bye bye. Ac nid ydych chi'n meddwl
y bydd hynny'n digwydd oherwydd mae'n rhaid i ni gael 20 sgriptau ar ddiwrnod. Landing on a desk. Yeah, but not all from Russell T Davies. You know. I suppose.
I don't.
Watching It's a Sin, which kind of, it was perfect and heartbreaking.
You were so lovely about that show.
No, it was so important.
We had Lydia.
We had Lydia.
And Ollie we've had.
We had Ollie on when he was cast, but he couldn't tell us what.
He couldn't talk about it.
Right, I've heard that one, heard that one.
Isn't he gorgeous?
Oh, he's lovely.
I mean, that entire cast was just...
But that's the thing, and I feel like there was such a gang in that.
But everyone was so lovable.
Oh, thank you.
And they all had their different issues and and and they were so loved and again with
nollie she's not problematic but she was a she's a strong character right that did give notes
i do feel that you write characters that people are willing them on people love them people are
invested in them oh i hope so I think why did
why did you
you didn't write
Nolly though
I mean in the sense
you didn't write her character
she was a person already
no
it's my take on her
it's just exactly
how she was
is it yeah
does that
does it ring true with you
well because
it was one of the really
very first soaps
to be honest
and it was
rather chaotic
because all the scenery
didn't
the kind of movement it was unloved it was unloved by the company that made it yeah and it was set chaotic because all the scenery didn't the kind of movement
it was unloved by the company that made it
and it was set in the Midlands
so it was an odd place
to set anything
also it was set in a motel
what is a motel?
it's like a typo
no one had motels but I think they thought they were a bit trendy
I think they thought that was the jet set
everyone's going to have motels hotels next to they thought they were a bit trendy. I think they thought that was the jet set. Yeah, that's a jet setting. Everyone's going to have motels.
Hotels next to motorways.
And it never took off.
I used to watch in the 60s and 70s and we'd sit there going
what's a motel? It was always
mysterious. And it was a bit dynasty
like because there was plotting
and things like that. Shares
and boardroom things. Over a motel was 60 rooms.
Yes.
But the more interesting people were always the
kind of the the chambermaid or who was having an affair with somebody else or the villagers
yeah the village yeah and the village it was in but it was kind of such an odd it was fundamentally
flawed that's why it kind of lurched along i'm not making any bones about it it's like the street
is a great you can't go wrong with Coronation Street,
working class people in a northern town,
in a street.
Yeah.
A motel with boardroom battles.
Over in Birmingham.
God, maybe Succession was kind of inspired by Crossroads.
I don't know.
It paved the way.
It paved the way for Succession.
But why so called Crossroads?
It was such a funny name.
Yes, the whole thing was.
There's a very trendy vegan restaurant in Hollywood called Crossroads. Yeah, but a funny name. Yes. The whole thing was... There's a very trendy vegan restaurant
in Hollywood called Crossroads.
Like Britney Spears goes to.
But people kind of got into it because
it was a bit odd.
So I think that...
When was it exactly?
Kind of 64 onwards.
It took a while to go network.
And then when was it... When did it start?
87. Meg was actually in 1981. It
died by 86, 87.
So I can remember at university
it became a cult. Was it?
To watch it, yeah. Because I was
in Birmingham University.
And it was a bit of a cult to watch it when you
didn't have measures. But Birmingham was
very proud of it. Yes.
They loved her. She was called Queen of the Midlands.
They loved her. That's what nollie was called
i i read something that you said about wanting to protect nollie's like legacy because that
she has no family yes and one of the curious things about her was um no husband never husband
no children also no brothers or sisters so she's kind of vanished from the record.
She died quite soon after she was sacked,
about four years later.
So, you know, we all talk about these great beings.
Someone said very interesting,
Nicola, the producer, said to me the other day,
I wish she'd said this to me while we were filming,
but she said, because I was like saying,
why isn't she remembered?
We remember Diana Dawes.
And Nicola said, that's because Diana Dawes is remembered as a sex bomb.
Yes, true.
We remember the sexy women, the men are in charge of who we remember.
She was already older when she was.
Yes, she was a beautiful woman.
But she's much more matriarchal.
Isn't that terrible that we remember the sex bombs?
Now I am using the phrase sex bomb, which is ridiculous in itself.
And we don't remember the more ordinary women.
Why did you fall in love with her?
Well, I was watching and I was 18 in 1981 pan oedd hi'n cael ei
ddysgu. Ac mae hynny'n ymwneud â'r oedolion. Roeddwn i'n mynd i'r brifysgol ac roeddwn i'n golygu
Jules Dickens a pheth bynnag. Roeddwch chi'n gwylio Crossroads. Ac roeddwn i'n hyfforddiol am Crossroads. Pan
wnaethoch chi fynd i'r brifysgol, ar gyfer y tro cyntaf, roedd ystafell yno, yn sydd â'r holl
llyfrau. Felly, ar y tro cyntaf o fy fywyd, roedd gen i gael mynediad i bob tabloid unigol. Felly,
bob mis, roedd pawb arall yn darllen ar y sborth a'r gwleidyddiaeth a phethau
fel hynny. Ond roeddwn i'n mynd i gael yr holl wybodaeth am yr hyn sy'n digwydd single tabloid so every morning I was you know everyone else was reading up on the sports and politics and things like that but I just go and get all the information about what was happening
to Nolly on cross I was obsessed with it and I genuinely thought it was strange even then at 18
years old I thought why are you sacking the lead I remember when she got this it was so shocking
yeah it was all over the page I mean it feels quite apt that you made this because obviously you've made so much television.
I don't mean it.
I'm a television soul.
But yeah, do you think it kind of stemmed
from this interest in television
and crossroads and characters
and big characters and all that?
It did.
It's true.
I grew up watching the soaps
and my mum and dad never switched the television off.
That's what I loved about them.
Visitors came to the house,
they'd leave it on.
In the background.
Yeah, and they did it until
closed down at night. And they never stopped
me watching anything. They were quite conservative. A couple of them.
They were two teachers. They were quite conservative
in many ways. In many ways, I think they were sort of beholden
to the television. They kind of thought it had authority.
And they didn't let me watch anything in the 70s.
All those plays for today. My parents were the same.
I, Claudia, stuff with all the sex in I, Claudia.
I was watching that at like 12 years old
quite happily
they never turned anything off
and it kind of made me
who I am
in a way
were you having telly dinners
no we didn't do that
no one did that then
okay
when did that
also my mum was an amazing cook
so we'd always have
sometimes I'd have it on my lap
if I was
lucky
very very good
on a Saturday night
oh yes sometimes I suppose you'd have times like that and Christmas when you're what Christmas I was very, very good on a Saturday night. Oh, yes.
I suppose you'd have times like that.
And Christmas.
What do you do?
Christmas dinner at night. Or when Miss World was on.
Oh, what?
So my parents were obsessed with Miss World.
Why?
It was a bit like the Eurovision.
Eurovision.
Oh, because my parents just, my father would get a thing out.
It was huge.
It was huge, Jessie.
My father would get a sheet out.
Oh, I bet he fucking did. No, he wasn't like that, my dad. get a thing out. It was huge, Jessie. My father would get a sheet out. Oh, I bet he fucking did.
No, he wasn't like that, my dad.
He was so conservative, my father.
But we'd kind of say who we thought was the best
and a bit like Eurovision.
Yeah.
You said that your mum's a good cook.
Give us a dish that just fills...
Well, I can remember, because this is in the 60s,
there was a shop in Swansea called The International
where she'd have to go to buy garlic
garlic
you wouldn't get garlic
in shops
it didn't exist
or olive oil
olive oil
my sister says peppers
as well
actual peppers
you wouldn't go there
so she'd go there
to buy that
she was just
she'd like
on a normal night
she'd say
let's have osso bucco
oh wow
she was a properly
properly marvellous cook
yeah yeah
it was amazing
it was normal to me
I just grew up with that
now I look around
and go oh right
that's not every mother
did she have Julia Child's book
no
it was all
she had all sorts of
handwritten recipes
and in old old books
she worked
she was a teacher as well
but she just
she lived in that kitchen
the day she died
the oven broke
that really happened
that really
something snapped
in the world
how old was she?
Oh, she was only 72. She was far too young.
2001. Far too young.
She should be around now. We all
miss her to this day. Is your dad alive?
No, he died about
when he was 90 years old. A few years ago.
And have you got brother and
sisters? I've got two older sisters.
Janet and Susan.
Now I'm not in my magic house
I've got a Swansea house, I'm very lucky
I've got a second house and they live just down the road
funny life isn't it, you spend your life
running away and going and living
your life and there's a bit of elastic
that just pulls you back
and it's nice. Who got the
cooking gene out of you?
Not me, my sister Susie really got
that, sorry sister Janet you've got a bit of. My sister Susie really got that. Sorry, Sister Janet,
you've got a bit of it.
But Sister Susie cooks all day long.
Sister Susie had a stroke 10 years ago
and is now amazingly,
completely recovered.
She's worked so hard.
Good for her.
She's 99% recovered.
It was a big stroke.
And baking became her way out of it.
She got a proper licence from the council
to bake in her kitchen
and started selling the cakes.
It was part of her therapy to just do things.
Wow.
And she learned icing.
She was a good cook anyway, but she learned icing.
She still does birthday cakes and stuff like that.
It was a real route out of a very dark time for her.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
She's amazing.
And she's still doing it?
Yeah, not less now.
She doesn't need to do it now.
It was quite compulsive at the time.
It was a thing she had to do to kind of prove she had to give up her job.
She was a teacher, so, you know, there was a big gap left.
But she filled it.
You come from a whole world of a family of academia,
like both parents were teachers.
Yes, both sisters are teachers.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, wow.
One of my nieces is a teacher as well.
One of my nieces works as a doctor,
and one works at British Steel.
How amazing.
Where did that come from?
Was it always English?
Did everyone study English?
No,
the rest of them were French.
Mum and Dad are French teachers
and my sister Janet
is a French teacher as well.
Yeah,
there's a lot of French.
And did you do what Jesse,
Jesse did English at uni.
Oh right.
Did you do all that early,
the Green Knight?
Oh God,
Anglo-Saxon.
Did you do that?
I hated that.
Why did they make you do that I hated that why did they
make you do that
I don't know
I think
I suppose it would
die otherwise
someone's got to
enjoy it
what was your
dissertation on
the Brontes
oh okay
love the Brontes
do you like the
Brontes
yes yes yes
what's your favourite
book
oh it's got to be
Wuthering Heights
really hasn't it
it's like
yeah
would you ever
make it
well it's been
done hasn't it
Kate Mellor did a version of that.
No, but do the Russell T Davies.
Do you think?
Yeah, I suppose.
Actually, in a way, I kind of think
I've got nothing to say about Wotherwick Heights.
I love it.
Okay.
But I think the best Wotherwick Heights
would be a very classical adaptation, actually.
I wouldn't particularly have anything to add to it.
Who's been your best Heathcliff?
Oh, that's a good question.
Oh.
But Tom Hardy would be an amazing Heath
Cliff, wouldn't he? Yeah, I think he'd be great.
He'd be properly rough. Moody and... Hard.
Yeah, yeah. Dangerous. He's going to have
that dangerous... Oh, there we go. Okay, I'll
do it. Right.
It started here. Are you hungry?
I'm always hungry. Okay, should we eat a bit? There's never a time
I couldn't eat a meal, to be honest. Okay, amazing.
I'm excited
to be... Well, it's a funny old time, isn't it?
Because you've been working,
and then we're eating at about quarter...
Well, 2.30, so it's a late lunch.
So mum was very particular
about not making you have something too heavy
in case you were eating later.
You could have made it as heavy as you like.
Okay.
I would have six meals a day, really.
Okay, well, we have two courses.
Very foodie family, actually, because of my mother. you like I would have six meals a day really okay well we have two courses
actually
because of my mother
yes so we do
we love our family dinners
and Christmas is brilliant
with my lot
it's like we have
such a laugh
and the big tables
we love it
okay
well I want to
tell you
I'm going to tell you
we are having
crab cakes
oh I love a crab cake
I haven't had a crab cake
in a very long time
wow I would choose crab cakes on I haven't had a crab cake in a very long time. Wow.
I would choose crab cakes on a menu.
Oh, well, there you go.
No, really.
We've got crab cakes with some salads.
I buy those tubs in Marks and Spencer's.
They do crab meat with a bit of egg on top.
With egg on top?
Yes, it's got a bit of...
You put the egg on top.
Do you know, I think they've stopped selling it,
now I think of it.
I haven't seen that for a while.
Oh, egg on top, gorgeous.
What, like grated egg?
Egg mayo?
No, a boiled egg that's been not mashed, but cut up into bits.
Bits of boiled egg.
Oh my God, that sounds delicious.
So you're not a good cook.
No, I'm all right.
You're okay.
What would be your dish you're cooking for us?
I would do a Salmon on asparagus
What I call my
Salmon pork cullis
I just put
Six asparagus in a row
And I put the salmon
Fillet on top
So it's nice
I cook that nice
And how
How do
Because I always
Cock up salmon
Is there a particular
Time that you do
In a particular way
That you do it
20 minutes
20 minutes
Unless it's a very thick
Fillet
Then 25
And it's that
Do you cover it So it kind of steams up In very thick filling, then 25 and it's that. Do you cover it so it
kind of steams up? In foil.
Yeah, in it goes. That's it.
25, I'd say 25 to be clear. And what would you serve it with?
Veg, I
eat, I know I don't look particularly healthy, but
I eat an extraordinary amount. My husband was very
ill for many years, bless him, he's passed away now.
I wasn't going to, when he was ill
everyone said, oh put him on a macro
diet, put him on a macro diet. I wasn't going to do that because ill everyone said put him on a macro diet put him on a macro diet
I wasn't going to do that
because I thought
in his last few years of life
I wanted to have a nice diet
but the one thing I did do
was say let's have lots of veg
because that's got to be healthy
so we ended up having
eight veg a night
eight
eight
on a plate
eight
and I still do that
now he's gone
I still have the eight veg a night
because that's got to be
good for you isn't it
absolutely
yes
it's so
that's mad isn't it it's it's it's so that's mad
how did you meet your husband uh out clubbing 10 to 2 in the morning in cruise 101 in manchester
what was the song playing do you know i wish i knew if i had a tardis i'd go back and i'd be
standing there creepily watching myself like a weirdo but um i don't know i wonder what it was
oh he was handsome literally across
a crowded floor
like
and this is my favourite thing
it turned out
he lived in Manchester
I lived in Manchester
it turned out
we'd both been going out
to the same clubs
for ten years
and had never seen each other
it's not huge
Manchester
it's not that big
isn't that strange
that is strange
that we'd walk
must have walked past each other
a hundred times
and yet that night
click
how long were you together for?
20 years.
Do you want a glass of wine?
I'm honestly all right with a cup of tea.
Honestly, thank you.
I very rarely drink.
I like to, but I don't.
Because you've got no strength.
Help yourself.
I'm going in.
And some dill mayonnaise.
Or would you like some chilli sauce?
Oh, no, I don't do chilli.
I'm just going to have a slightly crispy one here
because that looks...
When you got married, what was the food?
Oh, we just went out
for lunch
he was very ill
and he tricked me
into marrying him
by dying
so I used to
you're allowed to laugh
at this
because it's like
he used to
he used to say
let's get married
for years
and I said why
I don't want to get married
what nonsense
and I treated him
he thought it was nonsense
then he was dying of cancer
will you marry me
I couldn't say no.
Could I trick him? Russell, don't you want three, darling?
He tricked me.
Oh, okay.
Is that a lucky number?
Yeah.
I just want you to have the luck.
Of course I will.
I want you to...
I was just going to come back.
Yeah, exactly.
I wasn't stopping there.
Would you like some dill mayonnaise?
I will have that.
Thank you.
And, um...
No!
So I tricked him to marriage.
And, um...
Honestly, he was so happy to cancel it four times. Aw. When you cancel a wedding, onest, fe wnes i gansel eich cwrs 4 o amser.
Pan fyddwch chi'n cansiol gwrs, mae'n rhaid i chi ddod a chael £70.
Ychydig o bryd.
Ychydig o bryd.
Ie, i'w gwybod beth mae'r cyhoedd yn costio, hyd at y tro ddiwethaf.
Ychydig o bryd?
Y tro ddiwethaf, fe wnes i'i gansiol, a dywedodd fy ffrind Peter,
byddaf yn gwneud hyn, byddaf yn cansiol i chi.
Ac fe wnaethon nhw'i ffonio i'r fwbl ac fe wnaeth y gwbl yn creu.
Ac nid oedd hi'n cyfrifol.
Nid oedd hi'n cyfrifol.
Nid oedd hi'n cyfrifol.
A dywedodd, dyna ar y tÅ·.
Mae'n dda. Mae'n dda. Mae'n dda. Rwy'n mynd i house. You can have that one. Good. Oh, bless.
I'm going in on the crab cake.
Good.
Tell me what it's like.
Oh, it's lovely.
I think a crab cake's better than a fish cake as well.
Mm.
It's slightly sweeter.
You must feel so proud of so many people
that you have kind of been so important
in their lives and their careers David Tennant
Christopher Eccleston I mean I mean they do all right without me as well but you
must feel there's a kind of level of like a teacher that that that that
caring there is too yes and and you can't really turn out a night's telly
without seeing someone who's been a doctor or someone I know somewhere and
and then the opposite is true
then you get honoured to work with people like
not just Helen Boncarta
but like Penelope Wilton did Doctor Who with us
and I adored her
oh my god what great company she is
oh I love her
she's just lucky
yeah she's cool
are you doing Doctor Who now?
I'm back on it
yes yes yes
how long has it been since you were off it?
I left it in 2009
so 13 years or something so I'm back Yes, yes, yes. How long has it been since you were off it? I left it in 2009.
So, 13 years or something.
So I'm back.
How's it feel?
It's lovely.
I only came back because I had things to do.
And things I wanted to do to it.
And stories I wanted to write.
And it doesn't feel like going back. It feels like going forward.
But you relaunched it.
I mean, it was kind of dead and buried.
And then you put your magic to it, and it was great.
And that was mad.
Do you remember 2005 when it just went...
It was nuts. It was Doctor Who madness.
And the funny thing is, it had been...
A lot of these things. Crossroads and now Doctor Who.
You're reliving your childhood a lot of the time
and making sense of it and rewriting it. Mae'r cwrs-rhodd yn ymwneud â'r drws. Rydych chi'n byw yn eich prifysgol yn llawer o'r amser, ac yn gwneud syniad o'r peth a'i ail-ddychwelio. Ac mae'r ffaith fy mod i'n hoffi'r sioe honno fy nghymru o'r bywyd,
ac mae'n fy marn i'r bywyd cyntaf, nid dim dim fy marn i'r telefisio, ond fy marn i'r bywyd cyntaf
yn gwylio William Hartnell yn Rhegenerate. Gallaf gofio'r peth. Felly, dyna'r hyn,
ymwybodwch i'r holl blynyddoedd yna, yn 2009, mae'n dod i'w wneud. Mae'n dod i fod yn y sioe nifer un yng Nghymru. all those years later in 2005, I get to make it. It becomes the number one show in Britain. It's like, how lucky am I?
I'm very, very, very lucky.
I'm very, very talented.
You're not very lucky, you're talented.
Thank you.
So it's Doctor Who at the moment?
Yes, for years, I think, actually.
I'll have to spend years on that.
So there won't be any other projects?
Not for a while.
Oh, Russell.
Sorry, I know.
Time to give these young things a bit of space.
No.
Sorry. No, it'll be a while. Don't worry. I'm already talking about know. Time to give these young things a bit of space. No. Sorry.
No, it'll be a while.
Don't worry.
It's like I'm already talking about things that will get made.
Don't worry.
As if you're worried.
Did it feel...
I am worried.
Did it feel kind of, I mean, brilliant,
but overwhelming, the reaction to It's a Sin?
I mean...
To this day, I find it strange.
We all do.
The hard thing is, the weird thing is,
we're all so proud of it.
Yeah.
And it's literally life-changing for us. And I my life had changed did it go down well in the states yeah
it did it's like it's been very successful and but it's so hard to celebrate because it's so sad
yeah and and never mind how sad the drama is the real life stories are not just sad but infuriating
so do you know what we've never actually all of us gone out for dinner we kept on saying let's go for dinner and go hooray well done and and but it's very hard
to go hooray about it which i'm dying to in many ways but equally then you go wow it's so awful
what happened imagining the family of someone who lost their lives in that way and there are still
problems now with hiv and you see someone cheering about it so it it's an odd one. Yeah. It's really odd.
But we are so delighted.
We are properly passionate friends, all of us, for life.
It's gorgeous.
Just say la.
La.
Because we used to do that, me and my friends.
I know.
I almost cut that in the last minute.
I sat watching the edits going, does that work?
Aww.
No, I said, is that too much do you like
watching people
having an in joke
on screen
I had a real
debate with myself
thank god
we left it in
I think that's
what's so beautiful
about it
there was
so much of
your best friend
you know
it was
that language
friendship
yeah
which is
we don't often see
actually
good thank you
you have been so lovely about it
we loved it
it was kind of astonishingly wonderful
do you feel like you now have to
write in a kind of activist
or campaign I mean you know
Nolly is a brilliant
three parter which is about
a woman who is about you know, it's about
misogyny, it's about
it's about sexism, it's about
strong, you know, it's
it's making a point
and shining a light
on
an imbalance and injustice
much like It's The Cinemas, do you feel like
you're going to, do you feel
like you have to do this now? No, i feel like whatever i write about i turn that way okay i'm like an
armchair activist i'm probably quite lazy in many ways but i get very angry about a lot of things
very angry very angry and that's part i don't just write out of anger i write out of many reasons i
just love it i write it with joy as well, I think. But there is a lot of...
If it's a Doctor Who script, it starts coming out
no matter what. It's just my natural
bent is to do that and to
find things to say. And actually, I think that's when I'm writing
well.
So we've got your dish.
No, but what would your mum make?
Besides our cebuco.
Anything.
In the 60s, we'd have spaghetti bolognese.
We didn't do that then.
Spaghetti bolognese.
She was just...
You had to go and buy garlic from a special shop.
I know, it's not amazing.
Can you imagine?
How would you have managed, darling?
I wouldn't have smelt like garlic the other
night, would I? I remember the first
Chinese takeaway to arrive in Swansea and that was so
tantalising and
amazing. We ran there. It was
posh. To have a Chinese takeaway then
was posh because it was
foreign and different and marvellous. Oh my god.
So let's give some
shout outs to some of your favourite
Manchester and Swansea eats.
Places that you like to go.
My favourite eating in Swansea is a brilliant, cheap and cheerful,
is it Turkish restaurant called the Mediterranean in the Mumbles?
Where I know our tablecloth, cheap red wine, you know, and a cheap red glass.
And just lovely.
What's your order?
I will have, there's your order? I will have,
there's an order
where you can have
all the meats.
Oh yeah.
Mixed grill.
We love a mixed grill
in this house.
With the rice.
They put also in there.
My friend is gluten free.
She said,
hello I'm gluten free.
He said,
you can't have the rice then.
Yeah,
because they have
the little bits of also in it.
Why do they put the also in it?
Because it's nice.
Because it's nice.
It's hidden isn't it?
You wouldn't know.
Yeah, it's cheeky.
Oh, there's also in the right.
We've got the Mediterranean in Swansea.
What about Manchester?
Manchester, there's a Spanish tapas place called El Gato Negro.
And where's that?
Middle of town.
King Street, Middle of town.
Gorgeous.
Is that where Elizabeth's taken me?
Oh, I like that place.
And you can sit upstairs.
Yes, you can sit by the kitchen.
And it's quite dark wood.
Yeah, me and my sister sat in the kitchen a bit.
She watched them cook everything. Then she went home and duplicated it all. And it's quite dark wood. Yeah. Me and my sister sat in the kitchen a bit and she watched them cook everything
and then she went home
and duplicated it all.
And it's lovely.
I love that.
Properly nice.
Nice staff, friendly, funny.
Yeah.
And Sugo.
Have you been to Sugo?
No.
It's such good pasta.
Oh.
Oh my God.
Sugo.
Is that in Manchester?
Sugo, yeah.
See, I'm out of town.
Do you know what me and my sisters do now?
What?
We've started over the past few years.
You know when you read about
those really posh places online where they say you have to book a year in advance? Oh. So we booked a year in advance. Oh. Yn ystod y diwrnod yma, mi a fy mab a fi yn gwneud hynny nawr. Yn ystod y diwrnod yma, mi a fy mab a fi yn gwneud hynny nawr. Rydych chi'n gwybod pan rydych chi'n darllen am y lleoedd mor ffosg yn y gweinidog
lle mae'n dweud bod angen i chi ffosg y flwyddyn yn cynnwys.
Felly fe ffosgom y flwyddyn yn cynnwys.
Rydych chi'n gwneud hynny. Felly mae'n deimlad sy'n dod i'r llaw.
Mae hynny'n sylw gwych.
Felly rydym yn mynd i Long Coom.
Yn Fawr.
Pan ffosgwyd hynny?
Llyfr y flwyddyn yn ôl.
Roeddem yn mynd i
Copenhagen a Gerenium. Roeddech chi wedi mynd i... Dwi'n teimlo. Rydyn ni wedi mynd i... Rydyn ni wedi mynd i Copenhagen a rydyn ni wedi mynd i Gerinium.
Nid oeddet ti'n mynd i Noma?
Nid oedd, roedd Gerinium.
Oedd yn unigol iawn.
A byddwn yn gwneud hynny.
Wel, a ydych chi'n barod i rai puding?
Ie.
Iawn, gwych.
Felly, Mam, beth yw hyn?
Mae hyn yn ricotta al limoni.
Ie, i mi?
Rwy'n credu.
Efallai.
Ricotta, beth, Duda?
Dweud eto.
Ricotta al limoni.
Felly, mae'n ffansi...
Ricotta a lemon....semaen. Ricotta a lemon. R Say again Ricotta al limone
So it's like a fancy
Lemon cheesecake
Yeah kind of
So is it a bit like
The Pizza Express cheesecake
That you used to get?
Maybe
Okay amazing
You could have gone deeper
I'll give you more
I'm complaining
We need to know
Your last supper
Do you want raspberries?
My last supper
Darling raspberries
Yes please
He wants everything mum Have you not realised? And do you want raspberries my last supper darling raspberries yes please you want everything mum
have you not
have you not realised
and do you want
do you want mascarpone
or fresh cream
or a bit of both
or a bit of both
hey
I knew you'd want that
that's the family answer
yeah yeah
do you want cream
ice cream
custard or cream
all three please
that's me
so your last supper
your last
gosh your last supper. Gosh.
Your last supper.
A starter, a main, and a pud, and a drink of choice.
And one person that you're going to choose to have your last supper with.
Oh, wow.
Hooray.
For a starter, I will...
Do you know I love a prawn cocktail?
Love a prawn cocktail.
I do too.
Love the Mary Rose sauce and the crispy lettuce.
Have you had a good one recently?
I haven't had one for a while maybe Susie needs to make them
yes she can make anything
that's a task
that's a nice start
the main
I'd probably go for like
oh thank you darling
I'd probably have a roast chicken dinner
that's gorgeous isn't it
yeah I love roast chicken dinner that's gorgeous isn't it yeah I love roast chicken dinner
yeah and
again my family does cauliflower cheese with that
see that debate this week about would you have
cheese with a roast
that's been a thing on the radio too
Zoe Ball has been discussing
there's someone who grates cheese over their roast dinner
oh hang on
grates cheese over it
I mean look
it probably would work
well I'm sitting
thinking we have
cauliflower cheese
with our dinner
that's very true
and that's the same
but it's not like
a spag bol is it
it is a bit odd
do you want some
yes please
but a little sliver please
Zoe's conclusion was
that's too strange
okay fine
I must listen to Zoe
you're a radio 2 fan
in all things I am
yes
I love Zoe Ball
I love Zoe Ball.
I love her too. Way ago, when we were both...
She was like an 18-year-old researcher at Granada.
Oh, really?
When I was working there, yeah.
I went to her 20th birthday party.
We haven't...
I'd see her now and again.
We're not best friends or anything,
but I adore her.
I think she's lovely.
She's really, really is lovely
and completely genuine.
Yes, yes, yes.
Is that boring, going for a roast?
No, it's quite common. I love it. It's not boring. Yeah, yes, yes. Is that boring going for a roast? No, it's quite common.
It's not boring.
Yeah, it might have
been common,
but you've got to be honest,
Tiffany.
Bangers and mash as well
is lovely.
With an onion gravy?
Yeah, yeah.
And a mustard?
Not so much a mustard,
to be honest.
No.
My kids are really
into Yorkshire pudding,
so I feel like I should
be starting to do
Toad in the Hole for them.
Is it nice? Is it nice? Oh, this is lovely pudding is it nice pudding is very simple
Joe's ice cream from Swansea I love ice cream full stop Joe's ice cream there's a shop called
there's an old establishment in Swansea an old-fashioned ice cream parlour which has been
there always all my life it's been it's from 1922 it was founded. Joe's Ice Cream.
They only do vanilla.
It's just one, but well, they now have a little.
Joe's must do the best vanilla.
If they've got an ice cream parlour with only vanilla.
Simply amazing.
They've now bowed to the tourist trade.
They have a little tub where they have mint and chocolate and things like that.
But it's really simple. We don't talk about that.
Swayze people don't go to that part of the shop.
How do you have yours?
In a cone or do you get a tub?
Just a tub.
You might put some...
Sometimes you put some raspberry sauce on it.
Sometimes you put some chocolate sauce on it.
What do you think, Jessie?
It's delicious.
This is lovely.
Have you never...
No, I've never made it.
But Joe's ice cream parlor in Swansea.
I feel like it should be on every tourist destination.
In the summer, you'd have to queue to get in there.
It's so famous in Swansea. It's summer you'd have to queue to get in there. It's just so famous, this onesie.
It's like, my house is just up the hill.
How convenient that they film all the time in Cardiff now, eh?
I know, it's very convenient.
Can I have a bit more if you want?
Honestly, I'm...
It is exactly what I'd be looking for.
Do you need another cup of tea again to go with it?
I like Luquor tea.
Oh, really?
I'll happily drink this.
Sorry, is that what you offered me?
I really happily drink that.
No, we're not offering you at all.
No, I love you.
I love that you...
Yes, I love you.
That's tasty.
I want to know what your drink of choice would be
and who you would like to spend your last supper with.
Drink of choice wouldn't be booze.
I'd have a cup of tea.
I always had to do when I came out walking,
I'd have a cup of tea everywhere.
What's your tea bag?
Plain old Tetley.
Oh, Tetley. Simple old Tetley. Oh Tetley.
Simple old Tetley.
But for Christmas
my niece
bought me
1,000 tea bags
of Tetley.
A giant bag
bigger than my head
of Tetley.
My favourite present.
And I'm keeping
a tally on it
to see if I start
it on New Year's Day.
How long do you have
your tally?
I wonder.
I start it on New Year's Day
I'll come back to you
with this information.
Yeah I want to know how long it would take. Well I think I have about New Year's Day. I'll come back to you with this information. Where did I go for the last one?
Yeah, I want to know how long it would take.
Well, I think I have about four cups of tea a day.
How many tea bags is it?
Which is a thousand.
So do you have coffee as well?
I do.
So you're like amped up all day, Russell.
That's my favourite place in the world.
I go to a cafe every day and so on.
So I go to a cafe called Mumbles Coffee.
Mumbles Coffee.
With the nicest coffee I've ever had in the world.
With the nicest staff.
What's your order?
Just delightful.
Oat Flat White.
Oh, get you.
I love that.
Which I call an Oti Mabuse.
I walk in,
I go, Oti Mabuse.
Oti Mabuse.
And they know me.
They just make the Oat Flat White.
And off they go
with the nicest staff.
Lovely boys and girls.
That's my favourite place
in the world, actually.
And my husband loved it there.
It's very sentimental to me
because it was his favourite place to go and sit.
It's like living in a sitcom cafe.
It's like all the regulars come in,
they're all nuts and brilliant and funny
and it's a nice place.
Do you like oat milk?
I didn't put you down as an oat milk.
No, one of the baristas, Morgan,
my good friend Morgan, the barista,
talked me through the oatiness,
talked me through real milk.
And?
I had no choice in the end.
Well, I should also add he's very good looking.
I'll do whatever he says.
real milk and I had no choice in the end. Well, I should also add he's very good looking.
I'll do whatever he says.
Who's your favourite
person you've worked with besides the whole
cast of It's The Same? Oh, that's
hard because
they all... Who's being invited
to a dinner
party at Russell's?
I can't do
this.
Almost all actors are lovely.
Really. You've met people. They're nice aren't they? It's a laugh.
I like them when they're tense.
I like them when they're high maintenance. I understand that.
Yeah, because it's their face on screen.
I feel
I can sit there and type
and they've got to go do it in front of a camera
I admire them
for doing it
I love them
it's my favourite
I love Leslie Sharp
I've had a lovely
friendship with Leslie Sharp
over the years
because which one
did you do
Bob and Rose
we did a lot
she did Bob and Rose
and she did The Second Coming
and she did Doctor Who
with me
so I've kind of
poor Leslie
I think I've exhausted her now
but I adore her
yeah
lots of them
David Tennant oh my god Catherine Tate see I'm leaving billy pipe i'm leaving people out now stop it
yeah yeah yeah i need to know who you'd share your last supper with i know can i bring my husband
back yeah it'd be me and andrew sitting there and you know what we do off everything we just sit and
watch tv and that was our favorite nights that we just sit in love we'd laugh so much he had such
a good sense of humor. What was his job?
He was a customs officer.
Bless him.
He was a civil servant.
Customs officer.
And, yeah.
And just the desk job, really.
He did some years at the airport,
checking people and searching them.
But no, he just...
He was the person in charge of Europe's list of non-ozone depleting substances.
Christ.
That's a niche.
I put that in his...
How do they cope now?
What's happening with the ozone depleting?
No wonder the world's going to pot.
No one's in charge of the list.
Lenny, what are we going to do?
It's like, I'd love to get an ozone depleting substance.
You can't get them for love nor money.
But it's an ozone depleting substance. I don't know them for love nor money. Well, isn't ozone depleting
substance? I don't know. I never asked him.
Isn't it just spraying? Excuse me, it was all about me.
I didn't ask him what it meant. I just love
rattling that off.
Ozone depleting substances.
The European list.
I presume with Brexit, that's gone, actually.
They don't care. They won't let it in.
If you weren't watching the telly, what song would be playing?
Ooh.
The ba-ba-ba-ba.
Right now, it's that Lionheart by Joel Corey.
I can't stop listening to it.
I can't stop.
It's kind of carved its way into my head, that song.
Joel Corey does that to a lot of people.
Oh, it's...
Who is he, darling?
You'd know if you heard it.
It's quite anthemic.
It's in a chance now.
Or has been at Christmas.
And I'm so obsessed with it.
I had to go online and buy every mix of it.
Even the England World Cup mix.
There's a mix where they go, England!
Stop, Russell!
Just because I had to have variation from it.
The biggest John Corrie fan is Russell T. Davis.
Do you listen to pop music?
I do, a lot.
Do you?
Yeah, I love pop.
I put a lot of pop music into my stuff.
Yeah, totally.
And I specifically like pop.
Pete Pafferty, you know Pete Pafferty?
He was Catlin Moran's husband.
Yeah.
He identified my musical taste.
He said, oh, you actually like Euro pop.
And I was quite insulted for a while.
But I didn't realise what Euro pop meant.
Euro pop means good pop.
And I associated it with Euro pudding or something.
But he meant you're a proper
Euro pop fan
of your Abba's
and your Britney Spears
are the best
have you seen Abba
no
I must go to that
oh you really should
only Doctor Who
gets a mention
at the beginning
doesn't it
if there's a little speech
oh yeah
he says like Doctor Who
but go to travelling time
like that
that was my accent
it's so amazing
I know
last question
what is a taste
that can take you
back to somewhere
in an instant or a smell of food?
It's going to be Joe's ice cream again.
Joe's ice cream?
I know.
It's such a very...
I think it's ice cream with condensed milk in it.
That's all.
You know, it's like a secret recipe.
Yeah.
No one knows how to make it.
And also, my grandmother in 1912,
she was engaged to Joe Cascarini.
Joe as in Joe the ice cream guy.
And then broke up with
him we could
have been
ice cream
shit
you would have
been an ice
cream family
yeah
imagine you'd
be a maid in
Chelsea
there would have
been any
scripts there
would have
been a lot
of ice cream
but William
Boyd's book
Ice Cream Wars
do you remember
that in Scotland
well there must
be a better
answer to that
question
no I mean I quite something else any other taste of that in Scotland. Well, there must be a better answer to that question.
No, I mean, I quite... Something else?
Any other taste?
Just...
When you were living in your flat and going lark all the time,
what were you eating?
Oh, that's when I was a rubbish cook.
That's when I'd have, like, a tin of tuna.
Do you know what I like?
Tinned, boiled potatoes.
Oh, they're gorgeous.
Gorgeous?
Yeah.
How would you cook them?
You don't.
You have them cold at the tin.
Oh, my God, no.
Oh, my God.
Have you not ever had that?
No.
Oh, they're tasty.
Do they still mate then?
They do.
Yes, yes, yes.
Have you still got them in your cupboard?
No, I don't anymore.
Yeah, so.
But have a little cup.
There'll be a night.
I'm going to go out and buy that now.
And I'll do it.
Full of Bajos.
I think sometimes they have a mint taste
they're kind of
slightly minted as well.
No, no, no
I've never had them.
They have a very
starchy
boiled taste
to them
which is delicious.
Oh my god
I'll eat it now.
After this meal
I'll eat it now.
The tin was put in front of me
and you said
you've got to eat that
I have no problem.
Dear oh dear.
I've lost you
right at the end. And now it's mine to eat to eat that, I have no problem. Dear oh dear. I've lost you right at the end.
And now it's time to leave.
So that room's gone now.
Ross and TJ, thank you so much.
Go and have a rest before tonight.
Go and rest.
And I wish you all the best with Nolly,
because I think it's really good telly.
And it's great performances.
And there's such warmth and support for this.
It's a laugh, isn't it as well
yeah
I think
I think we're almost in danger
of like talking about
the issues behind it
and ignoring the fact
that it's a laugh
it is
it's a right old proper laugh
and like there's some
fantastic monologues
yeah
like Helena
has a few monologues
there's some audition pieces
on there
and you're
yes
audition pieces
it's really
such a fantastic watch
and I wish you
all the best
and obviously
Doctor Who
we're all very excited
about it
that's going to be fun
thank you so much
I've loved this
thank you for doing this
and I do feel bad
that you've got
a bloody screen
now we've given him
a rest
but I'm like
what every Sunday now
come on
I lived in London
I'd be
do come
we do good Rose
if you need
to just be in London for a bit,
but you need a home-cooked meal,
we've got you.
Just come.
Well, I could have had him here for another two days.
I hoped he'd move in.
I think he was knocking on all the wood.
I think that was wishing him luck for getting the invite back.
He's so warm and talented and lovely and generous.
Just a gorgeous, gorgeous man.
Thank you so much to Russell T Davies for coming here when he's got such a busy day.
He's going off to a screening now at the BFI.
He's been on Loose Women.
He's had his fair share of mouthy women with him today.
I thought you were going to say fish cakes then.
He did like the fish cakes.
He did like my crab cakes, darling.
They were really good, Mum.
They were delicious, weren't they?
But do you know what?
Can I just say something?
What?
The crab meat is so expensive.
They were eight pounds.
One little pot was eight pounds.
Oh.
So that was 24 quid.
And you used three pots.
I really liked it.
I liked the mayonnaise with the dill.
The dill mayonnaise made it, actually.
Did you put onions in the mayonnaise?
Or was it literally dill and mayonnaise? But there onions in the crab cakes i really finely chopped loved it
okay so you think it's worth doing again really liked it what about the ricotta
al limone i like that whose recipe was that i found it on the internet in italian and i got it
translated oh mom really. Was it easy?
Yeah.
How do you do it?
So it's just egg yolks with only 100 grams of sugar.
Oh, fab.
It's good for you.
And half a juice of a lemon.
I would have put a whole lemon in.
Yes, I think it could have been more lemony.
But it had two zest, two lemon zest in it.
And then you separate the egg, the whites,
and then you just, put the the egg yolks the
sugar and the lemon add the ricotta and it wasn't that tall no add the ricotta it only was three
eggs so you if you wanted to make it bigger you should have doubled it but it said to make it thin
i thank you for listening i I thank Russell T Davies.
And thank you mum for cooking such a lovely lunch.
Pleasure.
Have you got anything to say to your fans?
No.
It's look out on Instagram and TikTok.
For the new generation of Table Manners.
Oh God don't.
I'm TikTok-ing.
Anybody got any content they'd like to see Lenny doing.
Please email us at
hello at
tablemannerspodcast.com
and look out for my
new leopard print knife
it is a good knife
isn't it
yeah bloody cut your
finger
yeah
it's really sharp
anyway we'll see you
next week Bye.