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  • It's always lovely.

  • Thank you.

  • It's nice to be on.

  • Were often talking about TV when you're here.

  • But now we're talking about your autobiography.

  • Little me literally is little old me on.

  • This is this is done quite differently.

  • This is your life in A to Zed four.

  • That's right.

  • That's right.

  • So I've written this autobiography, but I've done it as an 80 said so Beers for bald because I lost my hair when I was six on is for eating.

  • It's a kind of love letter to food and jeez, for Gay and Jay's for Jewish.

  • And so it is my store wave.

  • Yeah, is my story, but I thought because I thought otherwise, I didn't want to do an autobiography where you start off.

  • I was born in blah, blah, blah because I thought no one cares about that.

  • So this way I can just kind of get to the interesting is that?

  • That's what I wanna do is tell him left bythe about the childhood.

  • But because I read the book and actually I found the childhood stuff really interesting, and it's kind of what shapes us.

  • Yeah, yeah, well, I lost.

  • I lost my hair when I was six, it'll just fell out on DSO in a weird kind of way.

  • I was sort of like famous as a kid on.

  • Everybody in my town knew me.

  • I kind of couldn't get away with anything.

  • So I thought about years old.

  • But did it just literally fall out or did you not to fall out in It's sort of stages?

  • Yeah.

  • It fell out over the space of two or three months across one summer.

  • I would wake up every morning and there would be strands of hair on my pillow, but because I was kind of known already.

  • Oh, that's the kid with no hair.

  • I thought I would want to do something with this attention, you know?

  • And that's what made me become a performer.

  • Really, But wasn't quite difficult for you first.

  • Didn't you even attempt to wear a wig?

  • You wear a wig?

  • Yeah.

  • So when I was when I waas 11 I've been bored for excuse me five years, and then I was getting ready to go to secondary school on my parents thought, maybe just goes hard enough.

  • Yeah.

  • Yeah.

  • So they thought maybe it'll help me fit in if I wear a wig.

  • So I actually got a wig on the national health.

  • And what was that week like?

  • It wasn't great because they didn't make kids wigs on the national health.

  • So I had a woman's wig.

  • It was huge.

  • It was, like, bigger than my head on.

  • And I had one term left at primary school, so I went in on the first day of the last term.

  • Toe wear.

  • This wig is kind of practice on.

  • One of the older boys just ran past me, ripped off my head.

  • And But that was the best thing anyone could have done, really.

  • But baldness run in my family.

  • I didn't realize that my own father wore a wig on.

  • We're not yet on when I was about 10 or 11 1 morning, before going to Hebrew classes on a Sunday, he summoned me into the bathroom, shut the door and said, Look, I've got something to tell you.

  • And then he started to peel back his wig and set up a light.

  • I'm like you.

  • I've got no hair, but don't tell anyone.

  • And then I went into Hebrew classes.

  • I went, Guess what?

  • My dad, Everyone went yet way.

  • Why you lost your hair?

  • Well, we don't know.

  • I mean, there's theory.

  • So two years earlier, when I was four, I was knocked down by a car on holiday in Portugal on people always thought, Oh, it's the shock that made my hair fall out.

  • But there's some other medical theories.

  • They're all in the book, Little baby, about the kid that ran past and Richard.

  • Now, now we go.

  • Oh, my God, that's really bullying.

  • Did you sort of see it?

  • Is that?

  • Yeah, I think I did.

  • Yeah.

  • Yeah, I think it was.

  • I think it was tough, you know, I was I was one of those kids that was marked out.

  • Yeah, but that forced me out of myself to develop a quick wit, you know, So sometimes little kids would come up to me and go.

  • You got no hair, and I'd go year.

  • Oh, my God, you're right.

  • It made me kind of come up with a game.

  • You talked about him eating and things and comfort eating.

  • And you actually have taken to a slimming club?

  • Yeah, when I was interned Teen You wouldn't know it to look at me now.

  • When I was 13 I was a bit overweight on DSO.

  • I was taken to Weight Watchers by my mom.

  • It was decided something needed to be done.

  • And I think, by the way, I need to go back.

  • Actually, on Dhe.

  • I went there on Dhe course years later in Little Britain.

  • We had a slamming doors.

  • Andi.

  • The thing was, the thing I was remembered when I was 13 was that there was a woman there that the beginning of every week would go have a new member way.

  • Put that into the way spell in.

  • Oh, yeah, you.

  • And also the other thing was, it was they were always trying.

  • They would say, Say, you know, you can You can make your own slimming version of a shepherd's pie.

  • But the Weight Watchers version of the shepherd's pie very slim.

  • And so she was really trying to sell us all the Weight Watchers product.

  • So we put that into into little Britain with Marjorie.

  • You've just done that, everybody.

  • There's such a great warmth.

  • Theo, make a little suggestion about that.

  • There are some characters that you probably wouldn't do now.

  • Yeah, I mean, little Britain is about 15 16 years old.

  • Now, if you think of that yeah, yeah, we're older.

  • Way algo old Andi.

  • I think you would do things differently now.

  • I don't think you do.

  • A funny There was a character who was a rubbish transvestite.

  • You know who said I'm a lady?

  • Yeah, and she was fun at the time, but I think we look at the transgender community differently now.

  • I think I think it would be very hard to do that now.

  • I think it would be hard to play characters of other races now.

  • And even Marjorie, you know, people talk about that now is in terms of fat shaming.

  • So we would we would definitely approach it very different, very hard, I think.

  • Now I think that was always the things people say.

  • Oh, you and David gonna bring back little Britain.

  • But I think if you brought it back the way we did it, then you would upset a lot of people.

It's always lovely.

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A2 初級

馬特-盧卡斯在6歲時就失去了所有的頭髮|鬆散的女人。 (Matt Lucas Lost All His Hair When He Was Just 6 Years Old | Loose Women)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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